600 likes | 1.18k Views
Propeller MRI. In Chan Song, Ph.D. Seoul National University Hospital. Contents: Propeller sequence (Periodically Rotated Overlapping Parallel Lines with Enhanced Reconstruction) Motion artifact Theoretical basis Applications. Motion
E N D
Propeller MRI In Chan Song, Ph.D. Seoul National University Hospital
Contents: Propeller sequence (Periodically Rotated Overlapping Parallel Lines with Enhanced Reconstruction) Motion artifact Theoretical basis Applications
Motion • Periodic: cardiac motion, respiration, blood flow • Sporadic: irritable patients’ motion • Translation, rotation, through-plane • Artifact in MRI • blurring and ghosting • Cause • Longer encoding step
Scan time= TR x matrix x Average Long scan time
MR image reconstruction under the assumption of object’s motion-free condition during whole k space coverage
Motion artifacts -Most ubiquitous and noticeable artifacts in MRI due to voluntary and involuntary movement, and flow (blood, CSF) -Mostly occur along the phase encode direction, since adjacent lines of phase-encoded protons are separated by a TR interval that can last 3,000 msec or longer -Slight motion can cause a change in the recorded phase variation across the FOV throughout the MR acquisition sequence
Solution for motion compensation • -Navigator echo usage to estimate the motion or motion related • phase from extra collected data • -Cardiac and respiratory gating • -Respiratory ordering of the phase encoding projections based on • location in respiratory cycle • -Signal averaging to reduce artifacts of random motion • -Short TE spin echo sequences (limited to spin density, • T1-weighted scans). Long TE scans (T2 weighting) are • more susceptible to motion
Motion (abrupt) phase error position error Solution Phase information Navigation Motion correction by phase information
Key ideas in propeller sequence • K space: partial covering for whole image • Motion detection: blade usage • Correction: FFT properties’ usage
Diagram of the PROPELLER collection reconstruction process for motion corrected MRI.
Rectangular filling Propeller filling ky kx Data acquisition
Phase Correct Redundant data must agree, remove phase from each blade image Imperfect gradient balancing, Eddy current effect: echo center shift
Windowing Before After Phase correction
Bulk Transformation Correction • Fourier transform correspondence • Image space k space • Translation Phase roll • Rotation Rotation • Separate estimation of rotation and translation
Fourier Transform Properties rotate imagerotate data
Rotation correction (magnitude image) Reference (only inner circle) Magnitude of the average of strips Rotation (only inner circle) Correlation
Blade by blade operation Rotation at maximum correlation Correction
Fourier Transform Properties shift image phase roll across data b is blade image, r is reference image
Translation Complex average k-space data Reference (only inner circle) Complex of the average of strips Multiplication Inverse FT (maximum)
Blade by blade operation Translation at maximum correlation Correction
Blade Correlation throw out bad – or difficult to interpolate - data
Through-plane motion :low weighting coeff.
Ky Kx Reconstruction (FFT) non-Cartesian sampling requires gridding convolution
correlation correction only motion correction only full corrections no correction
Artifact reduction due to head motion T2-FSE T2-Propeller T2-Propeller(corrected)
DWI-EPI B=1000s/mm2 DWI-Propeller (FSE) James G Pipe, 2002
DWI (b=700s/mm2) a. EPI (TR/TE/avg=2700/113/15) b. Propeller EPI (TR/TE/blade=1600/70/26) Wang FN, 2005
Useful application in propeller sequence • Motion- or Bo-inhomogeneities – insensitive • Irritable patient • Diffusion weighted image • Limitations in propeller sequence • Redundant acquisition • Long scan time: • High SAR: problem in higher field MR system • Solutions • Undersampling (Konstantinos Arfanakis, 2005) • Parallel imaging • Turbopropeller (James G Pipe, 2006) • Propeller EPI
Propeller sequence • Low sensitivity to image artifacts, • Bo inhomogeneity and motion • T2-, Diffusion-weighted images • (High SNR, low geometric distortion, low SAR)
References 1. Pipe J, MRM 42(5): 963-62,1999. 2. Pipe J, et al., MRM 47(1): 42-53,2002 3. Wu Y, Field AS, Alexander AL. ISMRM, Toronto, Canada, 2003. 2125. 4. Roberts TP, Haider M. ISMRM, Kyoto, Japan, 2004. 946. 5. Sussman MS, White LM, Roberts TP. ISMRM, Kyoto, Japan, 2004. 211. 6. Pipe J and Zwart N. Magn Reson Med 55:380–385, 2006. 7. Cheryaukaa AB, et al. Magnetic Resonance Imaging 22:139-148, 2004