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Respiratory self‐gating for free‐breathing abdominal phase‐contrast blood flow measurements
Author(s) -
Jin Ning,
Lewandowski Robert J.,
Omary Reed A.,
Larson Andrew C.
Publication year - 2009
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.21711
Subject(s) - blood flow , magnetic resonance imaging , medicine , breathing , flow measurement , nuclear medicine , signal (programming language) , hemodynamics , respiratory system , nuclear magnetic resonance , biomedical engineering , cardiology , radiology , physics , anatomy , computer science , thermodynamics , programming language
Purpose To demonstrate the feasibility of using a free‐breathing (FB) respiratory self‐gated (RSG) approach for abdominal phase‐contrast (PC) blood flow measurements. Materials and Methods PC‐magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) flow measurements were performed within the right renal artery, common hepatic artery, and main portal vein during breath‐hold (BH) and FB with both signal averaging and RSG in eight healthy volunteers. The resultant images were qualitatively scored by two independent reviewers blinded to acquisition techniques. Blood flow volume and cross‐sectional vessel size measurements were compared for three techniques. Results The overall efficiency for the RSG‐PC sequence was 38.9% ± 4.7%. Images acquired with RSG effectively mitigated respiratory motion artifacts, which were clearly evident within FB signal‐averaged images. RSG produced similar image quality to that of BH techniques ( P > 0.146) and resulted in similar vessel size measurements ( P = 0.694). Flow results for both FB RSG and signal‐averaged reconstructions correlated well with BH flow measurements ( r = 0.97 and 0.92, P < 0.001). However, only the RSG methods demonstrated excellent absolute agreement with BH‐PC flow measurements ( P = 0.600), with signal‐averaged methods resulting in significant overestimations. Conclusion RSG methods can limit respiratory motion artifacts to reduce flow measurement inaccuracies during free‐breathing PC measurements in the abdomen. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2009;29:860–868. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.