| Literature DB >> 21702060 |
Jason Mendes1, Dennis L Parker, Jordan Hulet, Gerald S Treiman, Seong-Eun Kim.
Abstract
High-resolution turbo spin echo (TSE) images have demonstrated important details of carotid artery morphology; however, it is evident that pulsatile blood and wall motion related to the cardiac cycle are still significant sources of image degradation. Although ECG gating can reduce artifacts due to cardiac-induced pulsations, gating is rarely used because it lengthens the acquisition time and can cause image degradation due to nonconstant repetition time. This work introduces a relatively simple method of converting a conventional TSE acquisition into a retrospectively ECG-correlated cineTSE sequence. The cineTSE sequence generates a full sequence of ECG-correlated images at each slice location throughout the cardiac cycle in the same scan time that is conventionally used by standard TSE sequences to produce a single image at each slice location. The cineTSE images exhibit reduced pulsatile artifacts associated with a gated sequence but without the increased scan time or associated nonconstant repetition time effects.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21702060 PMCID: PMC3184323 DOI: 10.1002/mrm.22909
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Magn Reson Med ISSN: 0740-3194 Impact factor: 4.668