Toward accurate and fast velocity quantification with 3D ultrashort TE phase‐contrast imaging

Author:

Degenhardt Katja12ORCID,Schmidt Simon34ORCID,Aigner Christoph S.1ORCID,Kratzer Fabian J.4ORCID,Seiter Daniel P.5,Mueller Max6ORCID,Kolbitsch Christoph1ORCID,Nagel Armin M.46ORCID,Wieben Oliver57ORCID,Schaeffter Tobias189ORCID,Schulz‐Menger Jeanette10111213ORCID,Schmitter Sebastian134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Physikalisch‐Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Braunschweig and Berlin Berlin Germany

2. Department of Radiology Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

3. Center for Magnetic Resonance Research University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

4. Division of Medical Physics in Radiology German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) Heidelberg Germany

5. Department of Medical Physics University of Wisconsin Madison Wisconsin USA

6. Institute of Radiology, University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich‐Alexander‐Universität Erlangen‐Nürnberg (FAU) Erlangen Germany

7. Department of Radiology University of Wisconsin Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

8. School of Imaging Science and Biomedical Engineering King's College London London United Kingdom

9. Department of Medical Engineering Technical University of Berlin Berlin Germany

10. Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

11. Working Group on Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Experimental and Clinical Research Center, a joint cooperation between the Charité Medical Faculty and the Max‐Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine Berlin Germany

12. DZHK (German Center for Cardiovascular Research), Partner Site Berlin Berlin Germany

13. Department of Cardiology and Nephrology HELIOS Hospital Berlin‐Buch Berlin Germany

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTraditional phase‐contrast MRI is affected by displacement artifacts caused by non‐synchronized spatial‐ and velocity‐encoding time points. The resulting inaccurate velocity maps can affect the accuracy of derived hemodynamic parameters. This study proposes and characterizes a 3D radial phase‐contrast UTE (PC‐UTE) sequence to reduce displacement artifacts. Furthermore, it investigates the displacement of a standard Cartesian flow sequence by utilizing a displacement‐free synchronized‐single‐point‐imaging MR sequence (SYNC‐SPI) that requires clinically prohibitively long acquisition times.Methods3D flow data was acquired at 3T at three different constant flow rates and varying spatial resolutions in a stenotic aorta phantom using the proposed PC‐UTE, a Cartesian flow sequence, and a SYNC‐SPI sequence as reference. Expected displacement artifacts were calculated from gradient timing waveforms and compared to displacement values measured in the in vitro flow experiments.ResultsThe PC‐UTE sequence reduces displacement and intravoxel dephasing, leading to decreased geometric distortions and signal cancellations in magnitude images, and more spatially accurate velocity quantification compared to the Cartesian flow acquisitions; errors increase with velocity and higher spatial resolution.ConclusionPC‐UTE MRI can measure velocity vector fields with greater accuracy than Cartesian acquisitions (although pulsatile fields were not studied) and shorter scan times than SYNC‐SPI. As such, this approach is superior to traditional Cartesian 3D and 4D flow MRI when spatial misrepresentations cannot be tolerated, for example, when computational fluid dynamics simulations are compared to or combined with in vitro or in vivo measurements, or regional parameters such as wall shear stress are of interest.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

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