Literature DB >> 33306216

Free-breathing radial imaging using a pilot-tone radiofrequency transmitter for detection of respiratory motion.

Eddy Solomon1, David S Rigie1, Thomas Vahle2, Jan Paška1, Jan Bollenbeck2, Daniel K Sodickson1, Fernando E Boada1, Kai Tobias Block1,2, Hersh Chandarana1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To describe an approach for detection of respiratory signals using a transmitted radiofrequency (RF) reference signal called Pilot-Tone (PT) and to use the PT signal for creation of motion-resolved images based on 3D stack-of-stars imaging under free-breathing conditions.
METHODS: This work explores the use of a reference RF signal generated by a small RF transmitter, placed outside the MR bore. The reference signal is received in parallel to the MR signal during each readout. Because the received PT amplitude is modulated by the subject's breathing pattern, a respiratory signal can be obtained by detecting the strength of the received PT signal over time. The breathing-induced PT signal modulation can then be used for reconstructing motion-resolved images from free-breathing scans. The PT approach was tested in volunteers using a radial stack-of-stars 3D gradient echo (GRE) sequence with golden-angle acquisition.
RESULTS: Respiratory signals derived from the proposed PT method were compared to signals from a respiratory cushion sensor and k-space-center-based self-navigation under different breathing conditions. Moreover, the accuracy was assessed using a modified acquisition scheme replacing the golden-angle scheme by a zero-angle acquisition. Incorporating the PT signal into eXtra-Dimensional (XD) motion-resolved reconstruction led to improved image quality and clearer anatomical depiction of the lung and liver compared to k-space-center signal and motion-averaged reconstruction, when binned into 6, 8, and 10 motion states.
CONCLUSION: PT is a novel concept for tracking respiratory motion. Its small dimension (8 cm), high sampling rate, and minimal interaction with the imaging scan offers great potential for resolving respiratory motion.
© 2020 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  XD-GRASP; motion-resolved reconstruction; pilot-tone; radial sampling; self-navigation

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33306216      PMCID: PMC7902348          DOI: 10.1002/mrm.28616

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Magn Reson Med        ISSN: 0740-3194            Impact factor:   4.668


  34 in total

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Authors:  D O Walsh; A F Gmitro; M W Marcellin
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2000-05       Impact factor: 4.668

2.  Self-navigated interleaved spiral (SNAILS): application to high-resolution diffusion tensor imaging.

Authors:  Chunlei Liu; Roland Bammer; Dong-Hyun Kim; Michael E Moseley
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3.  Prospective self-gating for simultaneous compensation of cardiac and respiratory motion.

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Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2008-09       Impact factor: 4.668

4.  4D respiratory motion-compensated image reconstruction of free-breathing radial MR data with very high undersampling.

Authors:  Christopher M Rank; Thorsten Heußer; Maria T A Buzan; Andreas Wetscherek; Martin T Freitag; Julien Dinkel; Marc Kachelrieß
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2016-03-16       Impact factor: 4.668

5.  The effect of motion on two-dimensional Fourier transformation magnetic resonance images.

Authors:  C L Schultz; R J Alfidi; A D Nelson; S Y Kopiwoda; M E Clampitt
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6.  Cardiorespiratory motion-tracking via self-refocused rosette navigators.

Authors:  David Rigie; Thomas Vahle; Tiejun Zhao; Björn Czekella; Lynn J Frohwein; Klaus Schäfers; Fernando E Boada
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2019-01-07       Impact factor: 4.668

7.  Z intensity-weighted position self-respiratory gating method for free-breathing 3D cardiac CINE imaging.

Authors:  Pascal Spincemaille; Jing Liu; Thanh Nguyen; Martin R Prince; Yi Wang
Journal:  Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2011-04-27       Impact factor: 2.546

8.  3D Cartesian MRI with compressed sensing and variable view sharing using complementary poisson-disc sampling.

Authors:  Evan Levine; Bruce Daniel; Shreyas Vasanawala; Brian Hargreaves; Manojkumar Saranathan
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2016-04-21       Impact factor: 4.668

9.  Whole-heart coronary MRA with 100% respiratory gating efficiency: self-navigated three-dimensional retrospective image-based motion correction (TRIM).

Authors:  Jianing Pang; Himanshu Bhat; Behzad Sharif; Zhaoyang Fan; Louise E J Thomson; Troy LaBounty; John D Friedman; James Min; Daniel S Berman; Debiao Li
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2013-02-07       Impact factor: 4.668

10.  Motion robust high resolution 3D free-breathing pulmonary MRI using dynamic 3D image self-navigator.

Authors:  Wenwen Jiang; Frank Ong; Kevin M Johnson; Scott K Nagle; Thomas A Hope; Michael Lustig; Peder E Z Larson
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2017-10-11       Impact factor: 4.668

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  1 in total

1.  Pilot tone-based prospective correction of respiratory motion for free-breathing myocardial T1 mapping.

Authors:  Juliane Ludwig; Kirsten Miriam Kerkering; Peter Speier; Tobias Schaeffter; Christoph Kolbitsch
Journal:  MAGMA       Date:  2022-08-03       Impact factor: 2.533

  1 in total

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