Fat mitigation strategies to improve image quality of radial 4D flow MRI in obese subjects

Author:

Shamim A. M. K. Muntasir1ORCID,Panagiotopoulos Nikolaos23ORCID,Spahic Alma4ORCID,Harris David T.2ORCID,Roldán‐Alzate Alejandro256ORCID,Wieben Oliver24ORCID,Reeder Scott B.24567ORCID,Oechtering Thekla Helene23ORCID,Johnson Kevin M.245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Wisconsin Madison Wisconsin USA

2. Department of Radiology University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Madison Wisconsin USA

3. Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine Universität zu Lübeck Lübeck Germany

4. Department of Medical Physics University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Madison Wisconsin USA

5. Department of Biomedical Engineering University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Madison Wisconsin USA

6. Department of Mechanical Engineering University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Madison Wisconsin USA

7. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Madison Wisconsin USA

Abstract

PurposeThis study addresses the challenges in obtaining abdominal 4D flow MRI of obese patients. We aimed to evaluate spectral saturation and inner volume excitation as methods to mitigating artifacts originating from adipose signals, with the goal of enhancing image quality and improving quantification.MethodsRadial 4D flow MRI acquisitions with fat mitigation (inner volume excitation [IVE] and intermittent fat saturation [FS]) were compared to a standard slab selective excitation (SSE) in a test–retest study of 15 obese participants. IVE selectively excited a cylindrical region of interest, avoiding contamination from peripheral adipose tissue, while FS globally suppressed fat based on spectral selection. Acquisitions were evaluated qualitatively based on expert ratings and quantitatively based on conservation of mass, test–retest repeatability, and a divergence free quality metric. Errors were evaluated statistically using the absolute and relative errors, regression, and Bland–Altman analysis.ResultsIVE demonstrated superior performance quantitatively in the conservation of mass analysis in the portal vein, with higher correlation and lower bias in regression analysis. IVE also produced flow fields with the lowest divergence error and was rated best in overall image quality, delineating small vessels, and producing the least streaking artifacts. Evaluation results did not differ significantly between FS and SSE. Test–retest reproducibility was similarly high for all sequences, with data suggesting biological variations dominate the technical variability.ConclusionIVE improved hemodynamic assessment of radial 4D flow MRI in the abdomen of obese participants while FS did not lead to significant improvements in image quality or flow metrics.

Funder

GE Healthcare

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

National Institutes of Health

Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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