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Accelerated ferumoxytol‐enhanced 4D multiphase, steady‐state imaging with contrast enhancement (MUSIC) cardiovascular MRI: validation in pediatric congenital heart disease
Author(s) -
Zhou Ziwu,
Han Fei,
Rapacchi Stanislas,
Nguyen KimLien,
Brunengraber Daniel Z.,
Kim GraceHyun J.,
Finn J. Paul,
Hu Peng
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nmr in biomedicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.278
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1099-1492
pISSN - 0952-3480
DOI - 10.1002/nbm.3663
Subject(s) - ferumoxytol , magnetic resonance imaging , medicine , nuclear medicine , radiology , cardiology
The purpose of this work was to validate a parallel imaging (PI) and compressed sensing (CS) combined reconstruction method for a recently proposed 4D non‐breath‐held, multiphase, steady‐state imaging technique (MUSIC) cardiovascular MRI in a cohort of pediatric congenital heart disease patients. We implemented a graphics processing unit accelerated CS‐PI combined reconstruction method and applied it in 13 pediatric patients who underwent cardiovascular MRI after ferumoxytol administration. Conventional breath‐held contrast‐enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (CE‐MRA) was first performed during the first pass of ferumoxytol injection, followed by the original MUSIC and the proposed CS‐PI MUSIC during the steady‐state distribution phase of ferumoxytol. Qualities of acquired images were then evaluated using a four‐point scale. Left ventricular volumes and ejection fractions calculated from the original MUSIC and the CS‐PI MUSIC were also compared with conventional multi‐slice 2D cardiac cine MRI. The proposed CS‐PI MUSIC reduced the imaging time of the MUSIC acquisition to 4.6 ± 0.4 min from 8.9 ± 1.2 min. Computationally intensive image reconstruction was completed within 5 min without interruption of sequential clinical scans. The proposed method (mean 3.3–4.0) provided image quality comparable to that of the original MUSIC (3.2–4.0) (all P ≥ 0.42), and better than conventional breath‐held first‐pass CE‐MRA (1.1–3.3) for 13 anatomical structures (all P ≤ 0.0014) with good inter‐observer agreement ( κ > 0.46). The calculated ventricular volumes and ejection fractions from both original MUSIC ( r > 0.90) and CS‐PI MUSIC ( r > 0.85) correlated well with 2D cine imaging. In conclusion, PI and CS were successfully incorporated into the 4D MUSIC acquisition to further reduce scan time by approximately 50% while maintaining highly comparable image quality in a clinically practical reconstruction time.