| Literature DB >> 26699850 |
Ning Jin1, Juliana Serafim da Silveira2, Marie-Pierre Jolly3, David N Firmin4,5, George Mathew6, Nathan Lamba7, Sharath Subramanian8, Dudley J Pennell9,10, Subha V Raman11,12, Orlando P Simonetti13,14,15,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Measurement of myocardial T2* is becoming widely used in the assessment of patients at risk for cardiac iron overload. The conventional breath-hold, ECG-triggered, segmented, multi-echo gradient echo (MGRE) sequence used for myocardial T2* quantification is very sensitive to respiratory motion and may not be feasible in patients who are unable to breath-hold. We propose a free-breathing myocardial T2* mapping approach that combines a single-shot gradient-echo echo-planar imaging (GRE-EPI) sequence for T2*-weighted image acquisition with automatic non-rigid motion correction (MOCO) of respiratory motion between single-shot images.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26699850 PMCID: PMC4690363 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-015-0216-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Fig. 1Sequence diagram for a black-blood, single-shot GRE-EPI which acquires a series of ECG-triggered T2*-weighted images at different echo times (TEs) during free-breathing
Imaging protocols
| Breath-hold Segmented MGRE | Free-breathing GRE-EPI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| OSU | RBH | OSU and RBH | |
| Acquisition Matrix | 160 × 90 | 256 × 84 | 192 × 86 |
| Slice thickness (mm) | 10 | 10 | 10 |
| Flip angle (degree) | 18 | 20 | 10 |
| TEs (ms) | 1.9, 3.5, 5.1, 6.7, 8.3, 9.9, 11.5, 13.1 | 1.6, 3.8, 6, 8.3, 10.5, 12.7, 14.9, 17.2 | 1.9, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 14 |
| TR (ms) | 15 | 20 | 19.2 |
| Bandwidth (Hz/Pixel) | 814 | 814 | 1860 |
| ETL | 1 | 1 | 5 |
| Segments | 7 | 9 | 10 |
| Acquisition window | 105 | 180 | 192 |
| Parallel acceleration | None | GRAPPA rate 2 with integrated reference lines | |
| ECG triggering (heart beat) | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Measurements | 1 | 1 | 4 |
| Total acquisition (heart beats) | 13 | 10 | 64 |
Fig. 2The workflow to generate the T2* map from free-breathing, T2*-weighted images acquired using the ECG-triggered, dark-blood, single-shot GRE-EPI sequence
Fig. 3Representative examples of T2* maps in four patients (a–d) acquired using breath-hold MGRE and free-breathing MOCO GRE-EPI. All four of these patients were able to hold their breath successfully during the breath-hold MGRE exam and both techniques produced T2* maps of good image quality
Fig. 4Examples of the T2*-weighted source images and their corresponding T2* maps in two patients (top and bottom) who failed to hold their breath during the breath-hold MGRE T2* scan: Severe ghosting and image blurring artifacts caused by respiratory motion during image acquisition are evident in the T2*-weighted images acquired with segmented MGRE; the corresponding T2* maps were also corrupted by respiratory motion (a and c), while the single-shot MOCO GRE-EPI acquisition effectively froze respiratory motion during the image acquisition and produced artifact-free T2* maps during free-breathing (b and d)
Fig. 5One example of T2*-weighted source images of the first three echoes and their resulting T2* maps in a patient with normal heart and severe hepatic iron overload. Images were acquired using breath-hold MGRE (a) and free-breathing GRE-EPI approaches (b) Both techniques failed to provide T2* quantification in the liver. (c) Curves of mean signal intensity within the ROI in the liver (red circle in a and b) vs. echo times, showing that the signal is below the noise level even in the image from the earliest echo
Fig. 6Bland-Altman plots showing the agreement for the T2* in the interventricular septum (a) and the liver (b) from free-breathing MOCO GRE-EPI and breath-hold MGRE measurements