Affiliation:
1. Department of Diagnostic Radiology The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong People's Republic of China
2. Institute for Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology University Medical Center Göttingen Göttingen Germany
3. Lauterbur Research Center for Biomedical Imaging Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology of Chinese Academy of Sciences Shenzhen People's Republic of China
Abstract
AbstractPurposeWe aimed to incorporate a deep learning prior with k‐space data fidelity for accelerating hyperpolarized carbon‐13 MRSI, demonstrated on synthetic cancer datasets.MethodsA two‐site exchange model, derived from the Bloch equation of MR signal evolution, was firstly used in simulating training and testing data, that is, synthetic phantom datasets. Five singular maps generated from each simulated dataset were used to train a deep learning prior, which was then employed with the fidelity term to reconstruct the undersampled MRI k‐space data. The proposed method was assessed on synthetic human brain tumor images (N = 33), prostate cancer images (N = 72), and mouse tumor images (N = 58) for three undersampling factors and 2.5% additive Gaussian noise. Furthermore, varied levels of Gaussian noise with SDs of 2.5%, 5%, and 10% were added on synthetic prostate cancer data, and corresponding reconstruction results were evaluated.ResultsFor quantitative evaluation, peak SNRs were approximately 32 dB, and the accuracy was generally improved for 5 to 8 dB compared with those from compressed sensing with L1‐norm regularization or total variation regularization. Reasonable normalized RMS error were obtained. Our method also worked robustly against noise, even on a data with noise SD of 10%.ConclusionThe proposed singular value decomposition + iterative deep learning model could be considered as a general framework that extended the application of deep learning MRI reconstruction to metabolic imaging. The morphology of tumors and metabolic images could be measured robustly in six times acceleration using our method.