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Temporally constrained respiratory gating improves continuously moving table MRI during free breathing
Author(s) -
Baumann Tobias,
Kannengiesser Stefan A.R.,
Honal Matthias
Publication year - 2013
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.23964
Subject(s) - gating , breathing , magnetic resonance imaging , tree traversal , image quality , computer vision , motion (physics) , computer science , artificial intelligence , nuclear medicine , medicine , algorithm , radiology , image (mathematics) , anatomy , physiology
Purpose To evaluate a novel breathing motion correction algorithm for continuously moving table magnetic resonance imaging (CMT‐MRI) that optimizes motion consistency in a fixed time span. Materials and Methods In 22 patients CMT‐MRI was performed during free breathing. During a preparatory phase (constant) or continuously during the scan (adaptive) gating thresholds were computed from breathing states that should allow for motion consistent k ‐space sampling. After data from a first k ‐space traversal was acquired irrespective of breathing motion, subsequently k ‐space lines with discordant breathing states were reacquired below the gating threshold. Time constraints of CMT‐MRI were respected, because a fixed time was allocated for reacquisition. Image quality and lesion depiction were evaluated on images reconstructed from the first traversal and motion‐corrected images. Results Compared to constant thresholds, gating with adaptive thresholds led to a higher number of reacquired k ‐space lines (60.1%/41.7%) and a larger fraction of motion consistent final k ‐space lines (96.6%/78.8%). Adaptive gating induced a significant increase in image quality for all regions affected by breathing motion. Only one of 22 lesions was not depicted on the adaptively corrected images, whereas 15 were readily appreciable. Conclusion Temporally constrained respiratory gating with adaptive thresholds allows for fully sampled, motion‐corrected CMT‐MRI acquisitions during free breathing. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2013;38:198–205. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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