Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging

Abstract Background Numerous self-gated cardiac imaging techniques have been reported in the literature. Most can track either cardiac or respiratory motion, and many incur some overhead to imaging data acquisition. We previously described a Cartesian cine imaging technique, pseudo-projection motion...

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Main Authors: Liheng Guo, Daniel A. Herzka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-04-01
Series:Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12968-019-0533-8
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spelling doaj-9958cd9e449543bb926da4f36a08b9e42020-11-25T02:37:37ZengBMCJournal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance1532-429X2019-04-0121111510.1186/s12968-019-0533-8Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imagingLiheng Guo0Daniel A. Herzka1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of MedicineDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of MedicineAbstract Background Numerous self-gated cardiac imaging techniques have been reported in the literature. Most can track either cardiac or respiratory motion, and many incur some overhead to imaging data acquisition. We previously described a Cartesian cine imaging technique, pseudo-projection motion tracking with golden-step phase encoding, capable of tracking both cardiac and respiratory motion at no cost to imaging data acquisition. In this work, we describe improvements to the technique by dramatically reducing its vulnerability to eddy current and flow artifacts and demonstrating its effectiveness in expanded cardiovascular applications. Methods As with our previous golden-step technique, the Cartesian phase encodes over time were arranged based on the integer golden step, and readouts near k y  = 0 (pseudo-projections) were used to derive motion. In this work, however, the readouts were divided into equal and consecutive temporal segments, within which the readouts were sorted according to k y . The sorting reduces the phase encode jump between consecutive readouts while maintaining the pseudo-randomness of k y to sample both cardiac and respiratory motion without comprising the ability to retrospectively set the temporal resolution of the original technique. On human volunteers, free-breathing, electrocardiographic (ECG)-free cine scans were acquired for all slices of the short axis stack and the 4-chamber view of the long axis. Retrospectively, cardiac motion and respiratory motion were automatically extracted from the pseudo-projections to guide cine reconstruction. The resultant image quality in terms of sharpness and cardiac functional metrics was compared against breath-hold ECG-gated reference cines. Results With sorting, motion tracking of both cardiac and respiratory motion was effective for all slices orientations imaged, and artifact occurrence due to eddy current and flow was efficiently eliminated. The image sharpness derived from the self-gated cines was found to be comparable to the reference cines (mean difference less than 0.05 mm− 1 for short-axis images and 0.075 mm− 1 for long-axis images), and the functional metrics (mean difference < 4 ml) were found not to be statistically different from those from the reference. Conclusions This technique dramatically reduced the eddy current and flow artifacts while preserving the ability of cost-free motion tracking and the flexibility of choosing arbitrary navigator zone width, number of cardiac phases, and duration of scanning. With the restriction of the artifacts removed, the Cartesian golden-step cine imaging can now be applied to cardiac imaging slices of more diverse orientation and anatomy at greater reliability.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12968-019-0533-8Golden stepSelf-navigationSelf-gatingMotion trackingPseudo-projectionsCine imaging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liheng Guo
Daniel A. Herzka
spellingShingle Liheng Guo
Daniel A. Herzka
Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
Golden step
Self-navigation
Self-gating
Motion tracking
Pseudo-projections
Cine imaging
author_facet Liheng Guo
Daniel A. Herzka
author_sort Liheng Guo
title Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
title_short Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
title_full Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
title_fullStr Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
title_full_unstemmed Sorted Golden-step phase encoding: an improved Golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
title_sort sorted golden-step phase encoding: an improved golden-step imaging technique for cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
publisher BMC
series Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
issn 1532-429X
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Abstract Background Numerous self-gated cardiac imaging techniques have been reported in the literature. Most can track either cardiac or respiratory motion, and many incur some overhead to imaging data acquisition. We previously described a Cartesian cine imaging technique, pseudo-projection motion tracking with golden-step phase encoding, capable of tracking both cardiac and respiratory motion at no cost to imaging data acquisition. In this work, we describe improvements to the technique by dramatically reducing its vulnerability to eddy current and flow artifacts and demonstrating its effectiveness in expanded cardiovascular applications. Methods As with our previous golden-step technique, the Cartesian phase encodes over time were arranged based on the integer golden step, and readouts near k y  = 0 (pseudo-projections) were used to derive motion. In this work, however, the readouts were divided into equal and consecutive temporal segments, within which the readouts were sorted according to k y . The sorting reduces the phase encode jump between consecutive readouts while maintaining the pseudo-randomness of k y to sample both cardiac and respiratory motion without comprising the ability to retrospectively set the temporal resolution of the original technique. On human volunteers, free-breathing, electrocardiographic (ECG)-free cine scans were acquired for all slices of the short axis stack and the 4-chamber view of the long axis. Retrospectively, cardiac motion and respiratory motion were automatically extracted from the pseudo-projections to guide cine reconstruction. The resultant image quality in terms of sharpness and cardiac functional metrics was compared against breath-hold ECG-gated reference cines. Results With sorting, motion tracking of both cardiac and respiratory motion was effective for all slices orientations imaged, and artifact occurrence due to eddy current and flow was efficiently eliminated. The image sharpness derived from the self-gated cines was found to be comparable to the reference cines (mean difference less than 0.05 mm− 1 for short-axis images and 0.075 mm− 1 for long-axis images), and the functional metrics (mean difference < 4 ml) were found not to be statistically different from those from the reference. Conclusions This technique dramatically reduced the eddy current and flow artifacts while preserving the ability of cost-free motion tracking and the flexibility of choosing arbitrary navigator zone width, number of cardiac phases, and duration of scanning. With the restriction of the artifacts removed, the Cartesian golden-step cine imaging can now be applied to cardiac imaging slices of more diverse orientation and anatomy at greater reliability.
topic Golden step
Self-navigation
Self-gating
Motion tracking
Pseudo-projections
Cine imaging
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12968-019-0533-8
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AT danielaherzka sortedgoldenstepphaseencodinganimprovedgoldenstepimagingtechniqueforcardiacandrespiratoryselfgatedcinecardiovascularmagneticresonanceimaging
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