Alina Schneider1, Gastao Cruz2, Camila Munoz2, Reza Hajhosseiny2, Thomas Kuestner3, Karl P Kunze4, Radhouene Neji5, René M Botnar6, Claudia Prieto6. 1. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, United Kingdom. Electronic address: alina.schneider@kcl.ac.uk. 2. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, United Kingdom. 3. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, United Kingdom; Medical Image and Data Analysis, Department of Interventional and Diagnostic Radiology, University Hospital of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany. 4. MR Research Collaborations, Siemens Healthcare Limited, Frimley, United Kingdom. 5. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, United Kingdom; MR Research Collaborations, Siemens Healthcare Limited, Frimley, United Kingdom. 6. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, United Kingdom; Escuela de Ingeniería, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Respiratory motion-corrected coronary MR angiography (CMRA) has shown promise for assessing coronary disease. By incorporating coronal 2D image navigators (iNAVs), respiratory motion can be corrected for in a beat-to-beat basis using translational correction in the foot-head (FH) and right-left (RL) directions and in a bin-to-bin basis using non-rigid motion correction addressing the remaining FH, RL and anterior-posterior (AP) motion. However, with this approach beat-to-beat AP motion is not corrected for. In this work we investigate the effect of remaining beat-to-beat AP motion and propose a virtual 3D iNAV that exploits autofocus motion correction to enable beat-to-beat AP and improved RL intra-bin motion correction. METHODS: Free-breathing 3D whole-heart CMRA was acquired using a 3-fold undersampled variable-density Cartesian trajectory. Beat-to-beat 3D translational respiratory motion was estimated from the 2D iNAVs in FH and RL directions, and in AP direction with autofocus assuming a linear relationship between FH and AP movement of the heart. Furthermore, motion in RL was also refined using autofocus. This virtual 3D (v3D) iNAV was incorporated in a non-rigid motion correction (NRMC) framework. The proposed approach was tested in 12 cardiac patients, and visible vessel length and vessel sharpness for the right (RCA) and left (LAD) coronary arteries were compared against 2D iNAV-based NRMC. RESULTS: Average vessel sharpness and length in v3D iNAV NRMC was improved compared to 2D iNAV NRMC (vessel sharpness: RCA: 56 ± 1% vs 52 ± 11%, LAD: 49 ± 8% vs 49 ± 7%; visible vessel length: RCA: 5.98 ± 1.37 cm vs 5.81 ± 1.62 cm, LAD: 5.95 ± 1.85 cm vs 4.83 ± 1.56 cm), however these improvements were not statistically significant. CONCLUSION: The proposed virtual 3D iNAV NRMC reconstruction further improved NRMC CMRA image quality by reducing artefacts arising from residual AP motion, however the level of improvement was subject-dependent.
PURPOSE: Respiratory motion-corrected coronary MR angiography (CMRA) has shown promise for assessing coronary disease. By incorporating coronal 2D image navigators (iNAVs), respiratory motion can be corrected for in a beat-to-beat basis using translational correction in the foot-head (FH) and right-left (RL) directions and in a bin-to-bin basis using non-rigid motion correction addressing the remaining FH, RL and anterior-posterior (AP) motion. However, with this approach beat-to-beat AP motion is not corrected for. In this work we investigate the effect of remaining beat-to-beat AP motion and propose a virtual 3D iNAV that exploits autofocus motion correction to enable beat-to-beat AP and improved RL intra-bin motion correction. METHODS: Free-breathing 3D whole-heart CMRA was acquired using a 3-fold undersampled variable-density Cartesian trajectory. Beat-to-beat 3D translational respiratory motion was estimated from the 2D iNAVs in FH and RL directions, and in AP direction with autofocus assuming a linear relationship between FH and AP movement of the heart. Furthermore, motion in RL was also refined using autofocus. This virtual 3D (v3D) iNAV was incorporated in a non-rigid motion correction (NRMC) framework. The proposed approach was tested in 12 cardiac patients, and visible vessel length and vessel sharpness for the right (RCA) and left (LAD) coronary arteries were compared against 2D iNAV-based NRMC. RESULTS: Average vessel sharpness and length in v3D iNAV NRMC was improved compared to 2D iNAV NRMC (vessel sharpness: RCA: 56 ± 1% vs 52 ± 11%, LAD: 49 ± 8% vs 49 ± 7%; visible vessel length: RCA: 5.98 ± 1.37 cm vs 5.81 ± 1.62 cm, LAD: 5.95 ± 1.85 cm vs 4.83 ± 1.56 cm), however these improvements were not statistically significant. CONCLUSION: The proposed virtual 3D iNAV NRMC reconstruction further improved NRMC CMRA image quality by reducing artefacts arising from residual AP motion, however the level of improvement was subject-dependent.
Authors: Camila Munoz; Iain Sim; Radhouene Neji; Karl P Kunze; Pier-Giorgio Masci; Michaela Schmidt; Mark O'Neill; Steven Williams; René M Botnar; Claudia Prieto Journal: MAGMA Date: 2021-06-24 Impact factor: 2.310