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Reblurred deconvolution method for chemical shift removal in F‐19 (PFOB) MR imaging
Author(s) -
Lee H. K.,
Nalcioglu Orhan
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
journal of magnetic resonance imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.563
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1522-2586
pISSN - 1053-1807
DOI - 10.1002/jmri.1880020110
Subject(s) - deconvolution , noise (video) , computer science , point spread function , signal (programming language) , blind deconvolution , algorithm , time domain , image resolution , nuclear magnetic resonance , acoustics , chemistry , physics , optics , artificial intelligence , computer vision , image (mathematics) , programming language
Perfluorocarbons such as perfluoroctylbromide (PFOB) can be used as contrast agents in the vascular system for fluorine‐19 magnetic resonance imaging or as synthetic oxygen carriers. F‐19 imaging has been proposed for studying the vascular system, capillary flow, tissue perfusion, and tumor oxygenation. A major difficulty is that F‐19 compounds often have complex multipeak spectra. These peaks result in chemical shift artifacts, lower signal‐to‐noise ratios, and blurred images. Each peak also excites a different section when a section‐select gradient is applied. Direct inverse filtering is the simplest deconvo‐lution method for correcting such artifacts; however, two major difficulties present themselves: functional singularity and noise amplification at high frequencies. The use of a new reblurred de‐convolution (RED) method appears to overcome these problems. Although this method is based on iterative deconvolution in the spatial domain, the computational overhead is negligible. Since the point spread function and object data are already available in the time domain as FID data, RED appears to be useful for eliminating chemical shift artifacts and suppressing noise amplification while restoring the original image without loss of resolution.

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