| Literature DB >> 34743718 |
Peter Kellman1, Hui Xue2, Kelvin Chow3, James Howard4,5, Liza Chacko6,7, Graham Cole4,5, Marianna Fontana6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Quantitative cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) T1 and T2 mapping are used to detect diffuse disease such as myocardial fibrosis or edema. However, post gadolinium contrast mapping often lacks visual contrast needed for assessment of focal scar. On the other hand, late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) CMR which nulls the normal myocardium has excellent contrast between focal scar and normal myocardium but has poor ability to detect global disease. The objective of this work is to provide a calculated bright-blood (BB) and dark-blood (DB) LGE based on simultaneous acquisition of T1 and T2 maps, so that both diffuse and focal disease may be assessed within a single multi-parametric acquisition.Entities:
Keywords: Dark-blood LGE; PSIR LGE; SASHA; T1 map; T2 map
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34743718 PMCID: PMC8573877 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-021-00823-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Fig. 1Sequence diagram for multi-parametric saturation recovery single shot acquisition (SASHA) combined T1 and T2 mapping using free-breathing protocol
Fig. 3Patient with subendocardial MI with good MI-blood pool contrast readily seen in both bright blood (BB) and dark blood (DB) PSIR. Subendocardial MI is evident in the T1 map
Typical imaging parameters for various PSIR LGE MOCO protocols
| Bright Blood (BB) | Dark Blood (DB) | mSASHA (joint T1 and T2 map) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preparation | Inversion Preparation | Inversion Preparation & T2 preparation | Saturation Preparation & T2 preparations (see Fig. |
| Readout (single shot) | SSFP FAIR = 50° FAPD = 8° | SSFP FAIR = 50° FAPD = 8° | SSFP Variable FA (max 100°) |
| Typical FOV / resolution | 360 × 270 mm2 1.4 × 1.9 × 8 mm3 | ||
| Matrix size | 256 × 144 (parallel imaging factor 2 & PF factor 7/8) | ||
| Number of acquired images | 8 (16 beats) | 16 (32 beats) | 30 (45 heart beats) |
| T2 prep TE | n/a | Variable (10—40 ms) | 55 ms |
| TE/TR | 1.2/2.8 ms | 1.2/2.8 ms | 1.3/2.9 ms |
FA, flip angle; FOV, field-of-view; TE, echo time; TR, repetition time
Fig. 2Patient with subendocardial myocardial infarction (MI) illustrating the synthetic phase sensitive inversion recovery (PSIR) late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) with varying blood suppression by adjusting the free parameter LGEb, defined in Eq. (4, 5)
Fig. 4Patient with subendocardial MI with poor MI-blood pool contrast in BB PSIR but readily seen in DB PSIR. The T1 of MI is similar to adjacent blood pool making detection difficult in the T1-map
Fig. 5Patient with acute MI with elevated T2 and microvascular obstruction evident as dark core
Fig. 6Patient with myocarditis and sub-epicardial LGE with mildly elevated T2
Fig. 7Comparison of measured contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) between MI and normal myocardium for calculated PSIR vs MOCO PSIR with BB (Left) and DB (Right)
Fig. 8Comparison of measured CNR between MI and adjacent LV blood pool for calculated PSIR vs MOCO PSIR with BB (Left) and DB (Right)
Fig. 9Phantom validation of proposed mSASHA using long TR scans as the standard of reference
Measured values of T1 and T2 in T1MES phantom
| T1 (SE) | T1 (mSASHA) | T2 (SE) | T2 (mSASHA) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 439 | 438 | 40.0 | 39.8 |
| 1111 | 1104 | 44.3 | 43.7 |
| 464 | 466 | 181.0 | 176.2 |
| 572 | 570 | 42.5 | 42.0 |
| 1361 | 1359 | 46.6 | 46.8 |
| 1527 | 1524 | 234.4 | 228.2 |
| 303 | 302 | 41.9 | 41.7 |
| 814 | 812 | 44.8 | 44.3 |
| 258 | 260 | 154.2 | 149.2 |
Fig. 10Attenuation of DB PSIR LGE signal in cases of elevated myocardial T2 arising from edema shown for varying T1 of edematous region