Literature DB >> 17649910

MRI of moving subjects using multislice snapshot images with volume reconstruction (SVR): application to fetal, neonatal, and adult brain studies.

Shuzhou Jiang1, Hui Xue, Alan Glover, Mary Rutherford, Daniel Rueckert, Joseph V Hajnal.   

Abstract

Motion degrades magnetic resonance (MR) images and prevents acquisition of self-consistent and high-quality volume images. A novel methodology, Snapshot magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with Volume Reconstruction (SVR) has been developed for imaging moving subjects at high resolution and high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The method combines registered 2-D slices from sequential dynamic single-shot scans. The SVR approach requires that the anatomy in question is not changing shape or size and is moving at a rate that allows snapshot images to be acquired. After imaging the target volume repeatedly to guarantee sufficient sampling every where, a robust slice-to-volume registration method has been implemented that achieves alignment of each slice within 0.3 mm in the examples tested. Multilevel scattered interpolation has been used to obtain high-fidelity reconstruction with root-mean-square (rms) error that is less than the noise level in the images. The SVR method has been performed successfully for brain studies on subjects that cannot stay still, and in some cases were moving substantially during scanning. For example, awake neonates, deliberately moved adults and, especially, on fetuses, for which no conventional high-resolution 3-D method is currently available. Fine structure of the in-utero fetal brain is clearly revealed for the first time and substantial SNR improvement is realized by having many individually acquired slices contribute to each voxel in the reconstructed image.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17649910     DOI: 10.1109/TMI.2007.895456

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging        ISSN: 0278-0062            Impact factor:   10.048


  79 in total

1.  Bias field inconsistency correction of motion-scattered multislice MRI for improved 3D image reconstruction.

Authors:  Kio Kim; Piotr A Habas; Vidya Rajagopalan; Julia A Scott; James M Corbett-Detig; Francois Rousseau; A James Barkovich; Orit A Glenn; Colin Studholme
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2011-04-19       Impact factor: 10.048

Review 2.  MRI of perinatal brain injury.

Authors:  Mary Rutherford; Miriam Martinez Biarge; Joanna Allsop; Serena Counsell; Frances Cowan
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2010-04-30

3.  Robust super-resolution volume reconstruction from slice acquisitions: application to fetal brain MRI.

Authors:  Ali Gholipour; Judy A Estroff; Simon K Warfield
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2010-06-07       Impact factor: 10.048

4.  Super-resolution reconstruction to increase the spatial resolution of diffusion weighted images from orthogonal anisotropic acquisitions.

Authors:  Benoit Scherrer; Ali Gholipour; Simon K Warfield
Journal:  Med Image Anal       Date:  2012-06-19       Impact factor: 8.545

5.  Super-resolution reconstruction in frequency, image, and wavelet domains to reduce through-plane partial voluming in MRI.

Authors:  Ali Gholipour; Onur Afacan; Iman Aganj; Benoit Scherrer; Sanjay P Prabhu; Mustafa Sahin; Simon K Warfield
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 4.071

6.  BTK: an open-source toolkit for fetal brain MR image processing.

Authors:  François Rousseau; Estanislao Oubel; Julien Pontabry; Marc Schweitzer; Colin Studholme; Mériam Koob; Jean-Louis Dietemann
Journal:  Comput Methods Programs Biomed       Date:  2012-10-01       Impact factor: 5.428

7.  Reconstruction of high-resolution tongue volumes from MRI.

Authors:  Jonghye Woo; Emi Z Murano; Maureen Stone; Jerry L Prince
Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng       Date:  2012-09-27       Impact factor: 4.538

8.  Non-pharmacological strategies to obtain usable magnetic resonance images in non-sedated infants: Systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Elisa R Torres; Tyler A Tumey; Douglas C Dean; Wondwosen Kassahun-Yimer; Eloise D Lopez-Lambert; Mary E Hitchcock
Journal:  Int J Nurs Stud       Date:  2020-02-22       Impact factor: 5.837

9.  The path forward is to look backward in time: fetal physiology: the new frontier in managing infants with congenital heart defects.

Authors:  Daniel J Licht
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2015-03-11       Impact factor: 29.690

10.  Temporal slice registration and robust diffusion-tensor reconstruction for improved fetal brain structural connectivity analysis.

Authors:  Bahram Marami; Seyed Sadegh Mohseni Salehi; Onur Afacan; Benoit Scherrer; Caitlin K Rollins; Edward Yang; Judy A Estroff; Simon K Warfield; Ali Gholipour
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2017-04-19       Impact factor: 6.556

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