BACKGROUND
1. Technical Field
[0001] This description pertains to phase-contrast (PC) MRI.
2.Background Discussion
[0002] Phase-contrast MRI (PC-MRI) has been extensively used clinically for visualization
and quantification of blood flow and velocity. The conventional 2D PC-MRI alternatively
acquires flow-compensated (FC) and through-plane direction (i.e. z-direction) flow-encoded
(FE) data, and the blood flow velocity is encoded by the phase difference between
the FC and FE data.
[0003] The FE gradients can also be applied in the two in-plane orientations, i.e. phase-encoding
direction (y-direction) and readout direction (x-direction). This further development
of three-directional velocity encoding PC-MRI with time resolved (CINE) three-dimensional
(3D) acquisitions is also commonly referred to a 4D flow MRI. 4D flow generally allows
for better visualization, more flexible retrospective territories selection and more
accurate peak velocity estimation.
[0004] Since these three-directional velocity encoding PC-MRI techniques (2D and 4D) typically
acquire FC and three-directional FE data (FC/3FE) in an interleaved fashion, four
acquisitions are needed to update one cardiac phase. This results in poorer temporal
resolution and temporal footprint than conventional 2D through-plane FE PC-MRI. As
temporal resolution and temporal footprint of PC-MRI are two important indices to
determine the measurement accuracy of peak velocity, this has an impact on diagnosis
of a number of clinical diseases, such as carotid artery stenosis. Low temporal resolution
and long temporal footprint can result in underestimations of peak velocities as well
as pressure gradients across valves or stenoses.
[0005] While the temporal resolution and temporal footprint can be improved by reducing
views-per-segment (the number of k-space lines acquired for each cardiac phase within
a single cardiac cycle), this accordingly increases total imaging acquisition time.
Fast MRI techniques have been developed and applied in PC-MRI to reduce the total
acquisition time. However, with certain views-per-segment, these fast PC-MRI techniques
can barely improve the temporal resolution and temporal footprint, which may not be
significantly helpful on improving measurement accuracy of peak velocity.
[0006] View-sharing PC-MRI techniques have also been developed in attempt to improve the
temporal resolution. A Shared Velocity Encoding (SVE) technique has been employed
to improve temporal resolution, see for instance the articles by
Da Wang et al., "Phase contrast MRI with flow compensation view sharing", MAGNETIC
RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, 73(2), 505-513 (2014) and
Hung-Yu Lin et al., "Shared velocity encoding: A method to improve the temporal resolution
of phase-contrast velocity measurements", MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, 68(3), 703-710
(.2011). However, the temporal footprint of each cardiac phase in the SVE technique is the
same as traditional 2D PC-MRI, and may suffer from even longer temporal footprint
(6*TR*views-per-segment) than conventional 4D flow acquisition (4*TR*views-per-segment)
when implemented with three-dimensional FE PC-MRI.
BRIEF SUMMARY
[0007] An aspect of the present description is a fast phase-contrast MRI (PC-MRI) apparatus
in accordance with claim 1 and method in accordance with claim 8 employing a Hybrid
One- and Two-sided Flow Encoding Only (HOTFEO) acquisition scheme for accurate blood
flow and velocity measurements of time-resolved three-directional-velocity-encoding
PC-MRI.
[0008] Velocity direction constraint is used to accelerate three-directional-velocity-encoding
PC-MRI by 4/3-fold using three-directional (3D) flow-encoded (FE) acquisitions to
provide more accurate calculation of background FC phase without acquiring flow-compensated
(FC) data, while maintaining the measurement accuracy of total volumetric flow and
total maximum peak velocity measurements. The hybrid one- and two-sided FE acquisition
of the present description improves calculation accuracy and addresses ill-conditions
of the constraint to extend its applications with minimal limitations.
[0009] Further aspects of the technology will be brought out in the following portions of
the specification, wherein the detailed description is for the purpose of fully disclosing
preferred embodiments of the technology without placing limitations thereon.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS
OF THE DRAWING(S)
[0010] The technology described herein will be more fully understood by reference to the
following drawings which are for illustrative purposes only:
FIG. 1 is schematic flow diagram of the HOTFEO acquisition scheme for calculating
4D flow characteristics in accordance with the present description.
FIG. 2 is a schematic phase diagram comparing the HOTFEO acquisition scheme with FEO
and FC/3FE.
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram for a system incorporating HOTFEO acquisition for calculating
4D flow characteristics in accordance with the present description.
FIG. 4 is a plot comparing the velocity constraint as function of FC signal phase
with two consecutive velocities having equal magnitude and direction.
FIG. 5 is a plot illustrating the difference between the acquired FC background phase
and the background phase from a healthy volunteer.
FIG. 6A is a plot showing the correlation of the RMSE of calculated FC phase and 1-VR.
The two parameters have an inverse correlation of FEO, and linear correlation of HOTFEO.
The FEO has larger FC estimation errors than HOTFEO, when the 1-VR closes to 0, the
FEO will fail to estimate the FC phase, but the HOTFEO still provides good FC estimation.
FIG. 6B is a plot showing the correlation of the RMSE of calculated FC phase and 1/SNR.
The RMSE of the FC calculation has linear regression with noise level (1/SNR) for
both FEO and HOTFEO. Higher SNR tends to have better FC estimation for both techniques.
FIG. 7A is a plot of the total mean flow velocity waveforms of the reference FC/3FE
PC-MRI and simulated HOTFEO.
FIG. 7B is a plot of the total peak velocity waveforms of the reference FC/3FE PC-MRI
and simulated HOTFEO.
FIG. 8A shows Bland-Altman plots of total volumetric flow measurements between simulated
HOTFEO and reference FC/3FE.
FIG. 8B shows Bland-Altman plots of total maximum peak velocity measurements between
simulated HOTFEO and reference FC/3FE.
FIG. 9A shows a plot of the total mean flow velocity waveforms of 2D reference FC/3FE
PC-MRI and 2D HOTFEO.
FIG. 9B shows a plot of the total peak velocity waveforms of 2D reference FC/3FE PC-MRI
and 2D HOTFEO.
FIG. 10A shows Bland-Altman plots of total volumetric flow measurement between 2D
reference FC/3FE and 2D HOTFEO.
FIG. 10B shows Bland-Altman plots of total maximum peak velocity measurement between
simulated HOTFEO and reference FC/3FE.
FIG. 11A shows a plot of the total mean flow velocity waveforms of 4D reference FC/3FE
PC-MRI and 4D HOTFEO.
FIG. 11B shows a plot of the total peak velocity waveforms of 4D reference FC/3FE
PC-MRI and 4D HOTFEO.
FIG. 12A shows Bland-Altman plots of total volumetric flow measurement between 4D
reference FC/3FE and 4D HOTFEO.
FIG. 12B shows Bland-Altman plots of total maximum peak velocity measurement between
4D reference FC/3FE and 4D HOTFEO.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0011] In common carotid arteries (CCAs), the blood flow tends to be laminar flow, and the
velocity direction (as opposed to magnitude) does not change significantly within
a short period time (e.g. duration of two cardiac phases). associating with the property
that phase signal of FC images does not change significantly, Eq. 1 provides the following
velocity direction constraint for cardiac phase n and n+1:

[0012] In Eq. 1, Φ
FC,n = Φ
FC,n+1 represents FC phase signal (i.e. FC background phase), and the two velocity vectors
of the two cardiac phases are:

and

[0013] The terms Φ
FEx,n , Φ
FEy,n and Φ
FEz,n are the acquired FE phase signals for cardiac phase n in the x, y and z directions,
respectively, and Φ
FEx,n+1 , Φ
FEy,n+1 and Φ
FEz,n+1 are the acquired FE phase signals for cardiac phase n + 1 in the x, y and z directions,
respectively. |V
n| and |V
n+1| are the velocity magnitudes for cardiac phases n and n + 1, respectively. V
n · V
n+1 is the dot product of two velocity vectors that contains 3D velocity information.
Eq. 1 essentially calculates the background phase Φ
FC,n that yields the smallest angle between the blood flow velocity vectors between two
successive cardiac phases. It is assumed that the smallest angle corresponds to the
smallest difference between the dot product of the two velocity vectors and the product
of the length of the two vectors, as shown in Eq. 1.
[0014] While the constraint of velocity direction has the potential to calculate the background
phase signal without acquiring the FC data, the velocity direction constraint itself
may have two ill-conditions: 1) the two consecutive velocities equal to each other
(V
n = V
n+1), which are likely to happen in diastolic cardiac phases; and 2) where the three-directional
projected velocities equal to each other (V
x,n = V
y,n = V
z,n, or Φ
FEx,n = Φ
FEy,n = (Φ
FEz,n), which may happen in certain orientations of blood vessels to the three encoding
directions in 4D flow acquisitions. As shown in FIG. 4 (solid curve), the constraint
constantly equals to 0 under the above two circumstances. These ill-conditions might
limit the applications of the velocity direction constraint, such as for diastolic
velocity calculations or imaging in target anatomy with various velocity distributions,
e.g. blood vessels such as aortic arch and circle of willis.
[0015] To address the above ill-conditions of the constraint and improve calculation accuracy
of FC phase signal, the HOTFEO acquisition method 10 of FIG. 1 is employed. The HOTFEO
acquisition method in comparison to FEO and FC/3FE schemes is also shown in the phase
diagram of FIG. 2. As shown in FIG. 2, HOTFEO applies interleaved two-sided FE acquisitions
in one direction (e.g. the y-(phase-encoding) direction), and conventional one-sided
FE acquisitions in the remaining directions (e.g. x/z-directions, i.e. frequency/slice-encoding
directions). FEO applies strictly one-sided FE acquisitions only in all directions,
while FC/3FE applies one-sided FE acquisitions in all directions along with acquisition
of flow-compensated (FC) data.
[0016] Referring back to the flow diagram of FIG. 1, the HOTFEO acquisition method 10, one-sided
flow-encoded MRI acquisition is applied at step 14 in the frequency-encoding (x) direction
and at step 18 in the slice-encoding (z) direction, while two-sided flow-encoded MRI
acquisition is applied at step 16 in the phase-encoding (y) direction. As seen in
FIG. 2, interleaved, two-sided FE is applied in the y-direction by alternating the
polarity of the FE gradient between successive cardiac phases
[0017] While two-sided FE acquisition is shown specifically in the y-direction in FIG. 1
and FIG. 2, it is appreciated that two-sided FE acquisition can be applied on any
one or two direction(s) of the three (x, y, z) directions. The two-sided FE was chosen
for the phase-encoding direction (y-direction), because it did not increase TE/TR
of the pulse sequence, as will be explained in further detail below. Furthermore,
it is appreciated that the order of acquisition between x, y, and z directions may
also be alternated as appropriate.
[0018] Referring back to FIG. 1, various physiological characteristics of the target anatomy
may be measured from the acquired FE phase data 12, such as blood flow and blood velocity.
In a preferred embodiment, the acquired FE phase data 12 is used to calculate the
flow-compensated (FC) background phase at step 20 using Eq. 1. Additionally, three-directional
velocities of each cardiac phase may be calculated at step 22 by subtracting the background
phase from the FE signal phases 12. By subtracting the phase images of the each flow
sensitive scan from the phase of the referenced flow compensated scan, the 4D flow
data 24 are obtained. The HOTFEO acquisition method 10 can be applied at systole and
diastole, for non-straight blood vessels.
[0019] Further processing steps may include correcting for eddy current, Maxwell terms and
gradient field nonlinearities, in addition to fast MRI techniques such as non-Cartesian
sampling, parallel imaging, and compressed sensing to further refine the data and/or
achieve even higher acceleration rates. In one embodiment, eddy current correction
is applied by subtracting the phase images of a steady phantom repeating scans with
the same parameters from the in vivo scans. View-sharing techniques may also be employed
to help improved the temporal resolution.
[0020] FIG. 3 shows a schematic diagram for a system 50 incorporating HOTFEO acquisition
for calculating 4D flow characteristics in accordance with the present description.
System 50 includes a computer or server 52 comprising a processor 54, and application
programming 56 stored in memory 58, the application programming 56 comprising instructions
for receiving raw data of the target anatomy 60 from MRI scanner 62, and applying
HOTFEO acquisition method 10 to output flow data (e.g. any of background FC phase
20, 3-D velocities 22, or 4D flow data 24 shown in FIG. 1). Application programming
56 may further include instructions for performing post-processing techniques such
as eddy current correction, fast MRI, and view-sharing.
[0021] Additional supporting calculations are as follows:
Assuming that the FC phase signal does not change between cardiac phases n and n +
1, i.e. φ
0,n = φ
0,n+1. the two velocity vectors of the two cardiac phases are:

and

[0022] Expanding the velocity direction constraint (Eq. 1) yields:

[0023] For the first of the two ill-conditions, when V
n = V
n+1, i.e. Φ
FEx,n = Φ
FEx,n+1, Φ
FEy,n = Φ
FEy,n+1 and Φ
FEz,n = Φ
FEz,n+1, Eq. 2 becomes:

[0024] For the second condition that the magnitude of three-directional velocities equals
to each other (V
x,n = V
y,n = V
z,n, or Φ
FEx,n = Φ
FEy,n = Φ
FEZ,n), Eq. 1 becomes:

[0025] In the two ill-conditions, the velocity direction constraint is underdetermined without
a unique solution. By applying the HOTFEO acquisition scheme of the present description,
V
y,n and V
y,n+1 have opposite sign of velocity magnitudes in y-direction. In order to maintain the
true physics meaning of velocity direction constraint, Eq. 1 is modified as:

[0026] A minus sign is used before the V
y,n * V
y,n+1 term because V
y,n and V
y,n+1 have opposite flow velocity encoding. Meanwhile, mathematically the constraint has
been constructed as a parabola-like function. For the first ill-condition, which in
HOTFEO technique, we have Φ
FEx,n = Φ
FEx,n+1, Φ
FEy,n ≠ Φ
FEy,n+1 and Φ
FEz,n = Φ
FEz,n+1, thus Eq. 3 becomes:

[0027] Qualitatively, the dot product part has second order term,

, and second order term of the times between two velocity magnitudes closely, not
strictly, equal to

. When they subtract each other, the constraint will become a parabola function with
second order term

, which may have a unique solution Φ
FC,n. A series of numerical simulations were performed by assigning various Φ
FEx/y/z,n to summarize the function behavior and draw a conclusion. Based on numerical simulations
of the constraint as a function of Φ
FC,n, the minimal point of the function (=0) is when Φ
FC,n satisfies Φ
FEy,n - Φ
FC,n = (Φ
FEy,n+1 - Φ
FC,n), i.e. the theoretical solution matches the initial hypothesis: V
n = V
n+1.
[0028] As for the second ill-condition, tt has two minimal points, one is the solution (=0
in the example) and its value falls in the range (ΦF
Ey,n+1, Φ
FEy,n), (assuming Φ
FEy,n > Φ
FEy,n+1). The other is when Φ
FC,n may equal to either Φ
FEy,n or Φ
FEy,n+1, and this extraneous root can be excluded by limiting the solution range within (Φ
FEy,n+1, Φ
FEy,n).
[0029] According to the above calculations, the constraint mathematically becomes a parabola-like
function (as shown in the dashed curve of FIG. 4) without changing the original physics
meaning of dot product between two velocity vectors. Thus, it can ensure a unique
solution of Φ
FC,n within the searching range (Φ
FEy,n, Φ
FEy,n+1), and an accurate estimation of FC signal phase, whereat the constraint of FEO (solid
line in FIG. 4) is ill-conditioned and not able to determine the FC signal phase.
[0030] Qualitatively, HOTFEO acquisition changes the mathematical function of the constraint
to a

behavior parabolic function, thus ensuring a unique solution of FC signal phase.
Combined with a solution searching range (Φ
FEy,n+1, Φ
FEy,n), (assuming Φ
FEy,n > Φ
FEy,n+1), this may aid in excluding extraneous root generated from the second ill-condition.
More importantly, the HOTFEO acquisition scheme also improves the calculation accuracy
of Φ
FC,n. The function of constraint without hybrid FE was flatter than HOTFEO. Consequently,
the minimal point of the constraint might be significantly influenced by noise factors,
as shown in the numerical simulation.
Example 1
[0031] The HOTFEO acquisition scheme was evaluated in healthy volunteers and compared with
conventional FC/3FE acquisitions in 2D and 4D flow quantifications. To validate the
HOTFEO acquisition scheme, flow measurements based on 2D/4D HOTFEO acquisitions with
three FE directions were compared with conventional 2D/4D FC/3FE PC-MRI. All studies
were performed on a 3 T scanner with 4-channel neck coils (Skyra, Siemens, Germany).
[0032] Numerical simulations were first performed to study the impact of signal-to-noise
ratio (SNR) and velocity magnitude ratio (VR = |V
n+1|/|V
n|) on the accuracy of FC calculation between the HOTFEO acquisition scheme and FEO
technique (i.e. all one-sided FE acquisitions in three directions). We assumed V
n = (-0.2, 1.5, 2.4) and Φ
FC,n = 0 as initial conditions, associated with SNR = 20, 30, 40, 50 and VR = 0.1, 0.25,
0.5, 0.75, 0.9 to compare the FC calculation accuracy of the two techniques. For each
combination of SNR and VR, we repeated 100 times with Gaussian noise distribution
satisfied the SNR. Root of Mean Square Error (RMSE) was used to indicate the FC calculation
accuracy.
[0033] Six volunteers were recruited in retrospective in vivo study. They were scanned by
a standard 4D flow sequence at the CCAs. The sequence was implemented with: Velocity
ENCoding (VENC) = 100 - 105 cm/s, flip angle = 20°, readout bandwidth = 815 Hz/Pixel,
TE = 3.35 ms, Views-per-segment = 3, temporal resolution = 67.92 ms, acquired matrix
= 256x176x10, FOV = 256x176x18.2 mm
3, and spatial resolution = 1×1×1.82 mm
3. All scans were acquired during free breathing with prospective ECG gating. Reference
4D flow data were simulated to the HOTFEO acquisition scheme as shown in FIG. 1 and
FIG. 2. Eq. 1 was used to calculate FC signal phase followed by three-directional
velocities. The simulated results from HOTFEO reconstruction, including total volumetric
flow and total peak velocity

, were compared with reference data as ground truth.
[0034] After the retrospective study, six additional volunteers were scanned at the CCAs
using: 1) the standard 2D FC/3FE PC-MRI sequence, 2) the prospective 2D HOTFEO sequence,
3) the standard 4D flow sequence, 4) the prospective 4D flow HOTFEO sequence. The
four sequences were implemented with: VENC = 100-105 cm/s, flip angle = 20°. The parameters
used by both 2D sequences were: readout bandwidth = 500 Hz/Pixel, TE = 3.72 ms, Views-per-segment
= 3 (FC/3FE) and 4 (HOTFEO), temporal resolution = 72.48 ms, acquired matrix = 256x176,
FOV = 256x176 mm
2, slice thickness = 7 mm. The parameters used by both 4D flow sequences were: readout
bandwidth = 815 Hz/Pixel, TE = 3.35 ms, Views-per-segment = 3 (FC/3FE) and 4 (HOTFEO),
temporal resolution = 67.92 ms, acquired matrix = 256x176x10, FOV = 256x176x18.2 mm
3. All scans were acquired during free breathing with prospective ECG gating. Eddy
current correction was applied in the in vivo studies data sets by subtracting the
phase images of a steady phantom repeating scans with the same parameters from the
in vivo scans. HOTFEO achieved 4/3-fold acceleration by using 4 views-per-segment
compared with 3 views-per-segment FC/3FE data sets. By subtracting the phase images
of the each flow sensitive scan from the phase of the referenced flow compensated
scan, the 4D flow data were obtained.
[0035] Region of interest (ROI) contours of the entire CCA lumen were drawn based on magnitude
DICOM images of each cardiac phase. For the all in vivo studies, Bland-Altman plots
were used to compare the agreements of total volumetric flows and maximum total peak
velocities between reference FC/3FE and HOTFEO techniques. In retrospective in vivo
study, RMSE and two-sided paired t-test (P<0.05 indicating statistical significance)
were used to compare the through-plane mean flow velocities and the total velocities

calculated from the FC/3FE reference and the HOTFEO.
[0036] Compared with the FC and three-directional FE acquisitions (FC/3FE), Bland-Altman
tests showed that 4/3-fold accelerated HOTFEO acquisition resulted in relatively small
bias error for total volumetric flow (0.89% for prospective 2D, -1.19% for retrospective
4D data, and -3.40% for prospective 4D data), and total maximum peak velocity (0.50%
for prospective 2D, -0.17% for retrospective 4D data, and -2.00% for prospective 4D
data) measurements in common carotid arteries.
[0037] FIG. 5 shows the difference between the acquired FC background phase and the background
phase from a healthy volunteer calculated using Eq. 1. Compared with standard 4D flow,
simulated HOTFEO showed that the FC calculation is accurate with mean RMSE = 0.04(range:0.02-0.06)
rad.
[0038] Table 1 shows the RMSE of calculated FC under various SNR and VR combinations. Both
HOTFEO and FEO tend to have more accurate estimation of FC signal (smaller RMSE) with
higher SNR (as shown in FIG. 6B). As shown in FIG. 6A, when velocity magnitudes become
close (i.e. 1 - VR becomes smaller), the RMSE of FC calculation by FEO has an inverse
correlation with

, while the HOTFEO acquisition method maintains the nearly the same accuracy, but
with very slight increase and the RMSEs of the HOTFEO acquisition method are always
smaller than that of FEO. The HOTFEO acquisition method has more accurate and consistent
FC estimations than FEO. From FIG. 6A, it is expected that when |V
n| = |V
n+1|, i.e. 1 - VR = 0, the RMSE of FC calculation by FEO technique will become infinite
large, but the HOTFEO acquisition method can still provide accurate FC estimation.
[0039] An example of through-plane mean flow velocity waveform and total peak velocity waveform
from one slice of one volunteer's data set is shown in FIG. 7A and FIG. 7B, respectively.
The HOTFEO acquisition method and reference FC/3FE method showed good agreement on
both waveforms. Three slices (slice 3,5,8) of both CCAs of six volunteers data sets
were selected to compare the measurements of the mean flow velocity and total peak
velocity waveforms. 36 total measurements of velocity waveforms showed that the average
RMSEs of mean flow velocity was 1.22 (range 0.65 - 2.07) cm/s and total peak velocity
was 3.23 (range 1.68 - 5.09) cm/s, which showed good agreements between two techniques.
The potential errors might come from the noise that reversed along velocities in y-direction
during simulation.
[0040] The Bland-Altman plot of total volumetric flow measurement is shown in FIG. 8A, the
bias is 0.0554 mL (-1.19% relative bias error) and the 95% confidence interval (CI)
was [-0.2399, 0.1292] mL. The Bland-Altman plot of total maximum peak velocity measurement
is shown in FIG. 8B, the bias is -0.1576 cm/s (-0.17% relative bias error) and the
95% CI was [-4.6985, 4.3832] cm/s. The Bland-Altman plot indicated a good agreement
between the HOTFEO acquisition method and reference FC/3FE on total volumetric flow
and maximum peak velocity measurements.
[0041] FIG. 9A and FIG. 9B show examples of 2D through-plane mean velocity and total peak
velocity waveforms comparisons, respectively, between reference FC/3FE and the HOTFEO
acquisition method. FIG. 11A and FIG. 11B show examples of 4D through-plane mean velocity
and total peak velocity waveforms comparisons, respectively, between reference FC/3FE
and the HOTFEO acquisition method. The two techniques show good agreement and consequently
result in good agreements of total volumetric flow and total maximum peak velocity
measurements.
[0042] Bland-Altman plots of total volumetric flow within the cardiac cycle measured in
the left and right CCAs of the six volunteers using HOTFEO and FC/3FE PC-MRI are shown
in FIG. 10A and FIG. 12A. For 2D PC-MRI study, the bias was 0.0388 mL (0.89% relative
bias error) with the 95% Cl [-0.1514, 0.2291] mL. For 4D PC-MRI study (slice 3,5,8
were chosen for relative measurements, same as the total maximum peak velocity measurements),
the bias was -0.1482 mL (-3.40% relative bias error) with the 95% Cl [-0.6142, 0.3178]
mL. The Bland-Altman plots of maximum total peak velocity (FIG. 10B and FIG. 12B)
showed that the bias of 2D study was 0.3729 cm/s (0.50% relative bias error) with
the 95% Cl [-5.9369, 6.6827] cm/s, and the bias of 4D PC-MRI study was -1.8029 cm/s
(2.00% relative bias error) with 95% Cl [-9.6631, 6.0574] cm/s. The 2D prospective
study showed similar statistics results (bias and 95% Cl of total volumetric flow
and maximum total peak velocity) when compared to retrospective 4D flow study mainly
because the minimal physiological change of volunteers within two 2D scans (<2 minutes).
But 4D prospective studies showed lager bias and 95% Cl than retrospective study and
2D prospective study, mainly because the total scan time (15 minutes to 20 minutes
for FC/3FE and HOTFEO) was significant longer than 2D studies, physiological changes
were observable during the scan, such as 20% heart rate change, motion between reference
FC/3FE and HOTFEO scans.
[0043] The utility of HOTFEO acquisition systems and methods have been demonstrated in PC-MRI
with multiple FE acquisitions (2D and 4D flow quantifications) for accelerating the
PC-MRI scans to achieve significant savings in total acquisition time. The HOTFEO
acquisition method of FIG. 1 and FIG. 2 is a pure phase image-based reconstruction
technique, therefore other fast MRI techniques, such as parallel imaging, compressed
sensing or non-Cartesian readout may be combined to achieve even higher acceleration
rates. Moreover, it can be used to improve temporal resolution and footprint for PC-MRI.
Typically, the temporal resolution and temporal footprint of PC-MRI with three-directional
velocity encodings equal to 4*TR*views-per-segment. With certain views-per-segment
and optimized TR, the temporal resolution and temporal footprint can no longer be
improved by fast MRI techniques.
[0044] View-sharing techniques may help improved the temporal resolution but not the temporal
footprint, which may still cause the underestimation of maximum peak velocity due
to the temporal averaging by long temporal footprint. FC signal phase is the parameter
that can be shared without significantly introducing errors to peak velocity measurements,
because it reflects the background phase which is not expected to change significantly
in a relative short period of time. In the HOTFEO acquisition and method, the FC signal
is only shared within two consecutive cardiac phases (about 140 ms), and it does not
introduce significant errors into the total maximum peak velocity measurements as
view-sharing techniques generally do. Thus, the HOTFEO acquisition method can improve
both temporal resolution and temporal footprint to 3*TR*views-per-segment by forgoing
the FC acquisition. When changing views-per-segment (= 1, 2, 3...), the temporal resolution
has a smoother step of increase (= 3TR, 6TR, 9TR...) compared with conventional FC/3FE
PC-MRI (= 4TR, 8TR, 12TR...). The improved temporal resolution is expected to provide
more accurate estimation of total maximum peak velocity.
[0045] The HOTFEO acquisition method has limited effect on increasing TE/TR. While two-sided
FE acquisition can be applied on any one or two direction(s) of the three directions,
the two-sided FE was preferably applied on phase-encoding direction (y-direction),
because it did not increase TE/TR of the pulse sequence. The minimal TE/TR was achieved
in PC-MRI sequence by partially canceling certain one-sided FE gradient with slice
refocusing (z-direction) or dephasing gradient (x-direction). However, when the opposite
one-sided FE gradient was applied, it could inevitably increase the gradient duration
as well as TE/TR.
[0046] From the results of total volumetric flow and total maximum peak velocity measurements
from both 2D and 4D FC/3FE, it was validated that the velocity direction was consistent
within 140 ms time span (=12*TR) in CCAs. The HOTFEO acquisition method is less sensitive
to noise, thus it can be used to accelerate FC/3FE PC-MRI, while maintaining the measurement
accuracy of blood flow velocity both in systolic (high VNR) and diastolic (low VNR)
cardiac phases with minimal limitations.
[0047] Embodiments of the present technology may be described with reference to flowchart
illustrations of methods and systems according to embodiments of the technology, and/or
algorithms, formulae, or other computational depictions, which may also be implemented
as computer program products. In this regard, each block or step of a flowchart, and
combinations of blocks (and/or steps) in a flowchart, algorithm, formula, or computational
depiction can be implemented by various means, such as hardware, firmware, and/or
software including one or more computer program instructions embodied in computer-readable
program code logic. As will be appreciated, any such computer program instructions
may be loaded onto a computer, including without limitation a general purpose computer
or special purpose computer, or other programmable processing apparatus to produce
a machine, such that the computer program instructions which execute on the computer
or other programmable processing apparatus create means for implementing the functions
specified in the block(s) of the flowchart(s).
[0048] Accordingly, blocks of the flowcharts, algorithms, formulae, or computational depictions
support combinations of means for performing the specified functions, combinations
of steps for performing the specified functions, and computer program instructions,
such as embodied in computer-readable program code logic means, for performing the
specified functions. It will also be understood that each block of the flowchart illustrations,
algorithms, formulae, or computational depictions and combinations thereof described
herein, can be implemented by special purpose hardware-based computer systems which
perform the specified functions or steps, or combinations of special purpose hardware
and computer-readable program code logic means.
[0049] Furthermore, these computer program instructions, such as embodied in computer-readable
program code logic, may also be stored in a computer-readable memory that can direct
a computer or other programmable processing apparatus to function in a particular
manner, such that the instructions stored in the computer-readable memory produce
an article of manufacture including instruction means which implement the function
specified in the block(s) of the flowchart(s). The computer program instructions may
also be loaded onto a computer or other programmable processing apparatus to cause
a series of operational steps to be performed on the computer or other programmable
processing apparatus to produce a computer-implemented process such that the instructions
which execute on the computer or other programmable processing apparatus provide steps
for implementing the functions specified in the block(s) of the flowchart(s), algorithm(s),
formula(e), or computational depiction(s).
[0050] It will further be appreciated that the terms "programming" or "program executable"
as used herein refer to one or more instructions that can be executed by a processor
to perform a function as described herein. The instructions can be embodied in software,
in firmware, or in a combination of software and firmware. The instructions can be
stored local to the device in non-transitory media, or can be stored remotely such
as on a server, or all or a portion of the instructions can be stored locally and
remotely. Instructions stored remotely can be downloaded (pushed) to the device by
user initiation, or automatically based on one or more factors. It will further be
appreciated that as used herein, that the terms processor, computer processor, central
processing unit (CPU), and computer are used synonymously to denote a device capable
of executing the instructions and communicating with input/output interfaces and/or
peripheral devices.
[0051] Although the description herein contains many details, these should not be construed
as limiting the scope of the disclosure but as merely providing illustrations of some
of the presently preferred embodiments. Therefore, it will be appreciated that the
scope of the disclosure fully encompasses other embodiments which may become obvious
to those skilled in the art.
[0052] In the claims, reference to an element in the singular is not intended to mean "one
and only one" unless explicitly so stated, but rather "one or more."
[0053] No claim element herein is to be construed as a "means plus function" element unless
the element is expressly recited using the phrase "means for". No claim element herein
is to be construed as a "step plus function" element unless the element is expressly
recited using the phrase "step for".

1. An apparatus (50) for time-resolved, three-directional-velocity-encoding PC-MRI of
a target anatomy (60), the apparatus comprising:
(a) an MRI scanner (64) configured for scanning the target anatomy and a computer
processor (54) coupled to the MRI scanner; and
(b) a non-transitory computer-readable memory (58) storing instructions executable
by the computer processor;
(c) wherein said instructions, when executed by the computer processor, perform steps
comprising:
(i) performing (14) one-sided flow-encoded (FE) MRI acquisition of the target anatomy
in a first direction, x, of three orthogonal directions, x, y and z, associated with
the MRI scanner;
(ii) performing (16) interleaved, two-sided FE MRI acquisition of the target anatomy
in the second direction, y, of the MRI scanner, wherein the interleaved, two-sided
FE MRI acquisition comprises alternating a polarity of a FE gradient between successive
cardiac phases; and performing (18) one-sided or two-sided FE MRI acquisition in the
third direction, z, of the MRI scanner;
(iii) generating (12) successive time-resolved FE datasets of the target anatomy from
the one-sided FE and interleaved, two-sided FE MRI acquisitions; and
(iv) calculating (20) a flow-compensated (FC) background phase from the FE datasets.
2. The apparatus of claim 1:
wherein the three orthogonal directions comprise a phase-encoding direction, a frequency-encoding
direction and a slice-encoding direction of the scanner; and
wherein the interleaved, two-sided FE MRI acquisition is applied in the phase-encoding
direction.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the one-sided FE MRI acquisition is applied in one
or more of the frequency-encoding direction and slice-encoding direction.
4. The apparatus of claim 2,
wherein one-sided FE MRI acquisition is applied in both the frequency-encoding direction
and slice-encoding direction.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the flow compensated background phase is calculated
according to the equation:
wherein

;
Wherein

; and
wherein ΦFEx,n, ΦFEy,n and ΦFEz,n are acquired FE phase signals for cardiac phase n in the x, y and z directions, respectively,
ΦFEx,n+1, ΦFEy,n+1 and ΦFEz,n+1 are the acquired FE phase signals for cardiac phase n+1 in the x, y and z directions,
respectively, and |Vn| and |Vn+1| are the velocity magnitudes for cardiac phases n and n+1, respectively.
6. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said instructions when executed by the computer processor
further perform steps comprising:
measuring one or more physiological characteristics of the target anatomy from the
FE datasets;
wherein the one or more physiological characteristics of the target anatomy comprises
calculating 3-D blood velocities of the target anatomy; and
wherein the 3-D blood velocities are calculated by subtracting the FC background phase
from the time-resolved FE datasets.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said instructions when executed by the computer
processor further perform steps comprising:
generating 4D flow data as a function of the calculated FC background phase and the
time-resolved FE datasets.
8. A method for time-resolved, three-directional-velocity-encoding PC-MRI of a target
anatomy, the method comprising:
performing (14) one-sided flow-encoded (FE) MRI acquisition of the target anatomy
in a first direction, x, of three orthogonal directions, x, y and z, associated with
an MRI scanner;
performing (16) interleaved, two-sided FE MRI acquisition of the target anatomy in
the second direction, y, of the MRI scanner, wherein the interleaved, two-sided FE
MRI acquisition comprises alternating a polarity of a FE gradient between successive
cardiac phases; performing (18) one-sided or two-sided FE MRI acquisition in the third
direction, z, of the MRI scanner;
generating (12) successive time-resolved FE datasets of the target anatomy from the
one-sided FE and interleaved, two-sided FE MRI acquisitions; and
calculating (20) a flow-compensated (FC) background phase from the FE datasets.
9. The method of claim 8,
wherein the three orthogonal directions comprise a phase-encoding direction, a frequency-encoding
direction and a slice-encoding direction of the scanner; and
wherein the interleaved, two-sided FE MRI acquisition is applied in the phase-encoding
direction.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the one-sided FE MRI acquisition is applied in one
or more of the frequency-encoding direction and slice-encoding direction.
11. The method of claim 9, wherein one-sided FE MRI acquisition is applied in both the
frequency-encoding direction and slice-encoding direction.
1. Eine Vorrichtung (50) für zeitaufgelöste, dreidirektionalgeschwindigkeitscodierende
Phasenkontrast-MRT einer Zielanatomie (60), wobei die Vorrichtung umfasst:
(a) einen MRT-Scanner (64), der zum Scannen der Zielanatomie konfiguriert ist, und
einen Computerprozessor (54), der mit dem MRT-Scanner verbunden ist; und
(b) einen nichtflüchtigen, computerlesbaren Speicher (58), der vom Computerprozessor
ausführbare Anweisungen speichert;
(c) wobei die Anweisungen, wenn sie von dem Computerprozessor ausgeführt werden, Schritte
ausführen, die Folgendes umfassen:
(i) Durchführung (14) einer einseitigen flusskodierten, FE, MRT-Erfassung der Zielanatomie
in einer ersten Richtung, x, von drei orthogonalen zum MRT-Scanner gehörenden Richtungen,
x, y und z;
(ii) Durchführen (16) einer verschachtelten, zweiseitigen FE-MRT-Erfassung der Zielanatomie
in der zweiten Richtung, y, des MRT-Scanners, wobei die verschachtelte, zweiseitige
FE-MRT-Erfassung das Abwechseln einer Polarität eines FE-Gradienten zwischen aufeinanderfolgenden
Herzphasen umfasst; und Durchführen (18) einer einseitigen oder zweiseitigen FE-MRT-Erfassung
in der dritten Richtung, z, des MRT-Scanners;
(iii) Erzeugen (12) aufeinanderfolgender zeitaufgelöster FE-Datensätze der Zielanatomie
aus den einseitigen FE- und verschachtelten, zweiseitigen FE-MRT-Erfassungen; und
(iv) Berechnung (20) einer flusskompensierten, FC, Hintergrundphase aus den FE-Datensätzen.
2. Die Vorrichtung nach Anspruch 1,
wobei die drei orthogonalen Richtungen eine Phasenkodierrichtung, eine Frequenzkodierrichtung
und eine Schichtkodierrichtung des Scanners umfassen; und
wobei die verschachtelte, zweiseitige FE-MRT-Erfassung in der Phasenkodierrichtung
erfolgt.
3. Die Vorrichtung nach Anspruch 2, wobei die einseitige FE-MRT-Erfassung in einer oder
mehreren der Frequenzkodierrichtung und Schichtkodierrichtung erfolgt.
4. Die Vorrichtung nach Anspruch 2,
wobei die einseitige FE-MRT-Erfassung sowohl in der Frequenzkodierrichtung als auch
in der Schichtkodierrichtung erfolgt.
5. Die Vorrichtung nach Anspruch 1, wobei die flusskompensierte Hintergrundphase gemäß
der Gleichung berechnet wird:
wobei

wobei


; und
wobei ΦFEx,n, ΦFEy,n und ΦFEz,n die erfaßten FE-Phasensignale für die Herzphase n in der x-, y- bzw. z-Richtung sind,
ΦFEx,n+1, ΦFEy,n+1 und ΦFEz,n+1 die erfaßten FE-Phasensignale für die Herzphase n+1 in der x-, y- bzw. z-Richtung
sind, und

und

die Geschwindigkeitsbeträge für die Herzphasen n bzw. n+1 sind.
6. Die Vorrichtung nach Anspruch 1, wobei die Anweisungen, wenn sie von dem Computerprozessor
ausgeführt werden, ferner Schritte ausführen, die Folgendes umfassen:
Messung einer oder mehrerer physiologischer Eigenschaften der Zielanatomie anhand
der FE-Datensätze;
wobei die eine oder mehreren physiologischen Eigenschaften der Zielanatomie die Berechnung
der 3D-Blutgeschwindigkeiten der Zielanatomie umfassen; und
wobei die 3D-Blutgeschwindigkeiten durch Subtraktion der FC-Hintergrundphase von den
zeitaufgelösten FE-Datensätzen berechnet werden.
7. Die Vorrichtung nach Anspruch 1, wobei die Anweisungen, wenn sie von dem Computerprozessor
ausgeführt werden, ferner Schritte ausführen, die Folgendes umfassen:
Erzeugung von 4D-Flussdaten in Abhängigkeit von der berechneten FC-Hintergrundphase
und den zeitaufgelösten FE-Datensätzen.
8. Verfahren zur zeitaufgelösten, dreidirektionalgeschwindigkeitscodierenden Phasenkontrast-MRT
einer Zielanatomie, wobei das Verfahren umfasst:
Durchführung (14) einer einseitigen flusskodierten, FE, MRT-Erfassung der Zielanatomie
in einer ersten Richtung, x, von drei orthogonalen zum MRT-Scanner gehörenden Richtungen,
x, y und z;
Durchführen (16) einer verschachtelten, zweiseitigen FE-MRT-Erfassung der Zielanatomie
in der zweiten Richtung, y, des MRT-Scanners, wobei die verschachtelte, zweiseitige
FE-MRT-Erfassung das Abwechseln einer Polarität eines FE-Gradienten zwischen aufeinanderfolgenden
Herzphasen umfasst; Durchführen (18) einer einseitigen oder zweiseitigen FE-MRT-Erfassung
in der dritten Richtung, z, des MRT-Scanners;
Erzeugen (12) von aufeinanderfolgenden zeitaufgelösten FE-Datensätzen der Zielanatomie
aus den einseitigen FE- und verschachtelten, zweiseitigen FE-MRT-Erfassungen; und
Berechnung (20) einer flusskompensierten, FC, Hintergrundphase aus den FE-Datensätzen.
9. Das Verfahren nach Anspruch 8,
wobei die drei orthogonalen Richtungen eine Phasenkodierrichtung, eine Frequenzkodierrichtung
und eine Schichtkodierrichtung des Scanners umfassen; und
wobei die verschachtelte, zweiseitige FE-MRT-Erfassung in der Phasenkodierrichtung
erfolgt.
10. Das Verfahren nach Anspruch 9, wobei die einseitige FE-MRT-Erfassung in einer oder
mehreren der Frequenzkodierrichtung und der Schichtkodierrichtung erfolgt.
11. Das Verfahren nach Anspruch 9, wobei die einseitige FE-MRT-Erfassung sowohl in der
Frequenzkodierrichtung als auch in der Schichtkodierrichtung erfolgt.
1. Appareil (50) pour IRM-PC codant pour une vitesse tridirectionnelle à résolution dans
le temps d'une anatomie de cible (60), l'appareil comprenant :
(a) un scanner d'IRM (64) configuré pour scanner l'anatomie de cible et un processeur
d'ordinateur (54) couplé au scanner d'IRM ; et
(b) une mémoire lisible sur ordinateur non transitoire (58) stockant des instructions
exécutables par le processeur d'ordinateur ;
(c) lesdites instructions, lorsqu'elles sont exécutées par le processeur d'ordinateur,
effectuant les étapes comprenant :
(i) la réalisation (14) de l'acquisition d'une IRM codée par écoulement (FE) sur un
côté de l'anatomie de cible dans une première direction x, des trois directions orthogonales
x, y, et z, associées avec le scanner d'IRM ;
(ii) la réalisation (16) de l'acquisition d'IRM FE à deux côtés, intercalés, de l'anatomie
de cible dans la deuxième direction, y, du scanner d'IRM, l'acquisition d'iRM FE à
deux côtés, intercalés, comprenant en alternance une polarité d'un gradient de FE
entre les phases cardiaques successives ; et effectuant (18) une acquisition d'IRM
FE à un côté ou à deux côtés dans la troisième direction, z, du scanner d'IRM ;
(iii) la production (12) d'ensembles de données de FE à résolution dans le temps successifs
de l'anatomie de cible des acquisitions de l'IRM FE à un côté et de l'IRM FE à deux
côtés, intercalés ; et
(iv) le calcul (20) d'une phase de bruit de fond compensée par écoulement (FC) des
ensembles de données de FE.
2. Appareil selon la revendication 1 :
dans lequel les trois directions orthogonales comprennent une direction d'encodage
de phase, une direction d'encodage de fréquence et une direction d'encodage de tranche
du scanner ; et
dans lequel l'acquisition d'IRM FE à deux côtés, intercalés, est appliquée dans la
direction d'encodage de phase.
3. Appareil selon la revendication 2, dans lequel l'acquisition d'IRM FE à un côté est
appliquée dans une ou plusieurs de la direction d'encodage de fréquence et dans la
direction d'encodage de tranche.
4. Appareil selon la revendication 2, dans lequel une acquisition d'IRM FE à un côté
est appliquée aux deux direction d'encodage de fréquence et direction d'encodage de
tranche.
5. Appareil selon la revendication 1, dans lequel la phase de bruit de fond compensée
par écoulement est calculé selon l'équation :

dans laquelle

dans laquelle

et
dans lesquelles ΦFEx,n ΦFEy,n, ΦFEz,n sont des signaux de phase FE acquis pour la phase cardiaque n dans les directions
x, y et z,
respectivement, ΦFEx,n+1, ΦFEy,n+1 et ΦFEz,n+1 sont les signaux de phase FE acquis pour l phase n+1 dans les directions x, y, et
z, respectivement, et

et

sont les amplitudes de vitesse pour les phases cardiaques n et n+1, respectivement.
6. Appareil selon la revendication 1,
dans lequel lesdites instructions quand elles sont exécutées par le processeur d'ordinateur
effectuent en outre les étapes comprenant :
la mesure d'une ou de plusieurs caractéristiques physiologiques de l'anatomie de cible
à partir des ensembles de données de FE ;
les une ou plusieurs caractéristiques physiologiques de l'anatomie de cible comprenant
les vitesses de sang 3-D de l'anatomie de cible ; et
les vitesses de sang 3-D étant calculées en soustrayant la phase de bruit de fond
de FC des ensembles de données de FE à résolution dans le temps.
7. Appareil selon la revendication 1,
dans lequel lesdites instructions lorsqu'elles sont exécutées par le processeur d'ordinateur
effectuent en outre les étapes comprenant :
la production de données d'écoulement 4D en fonction de la phase de bruit de fond
de FC calculée et des ensembles de données de FE à résolution dans le temps.
8. Procédé d'IRM-PC d'encodage de vitesse tridirectionnelle, à résolution dans le temps,
d'une anatomie de cible, le procédé comprenant :
la réalisation (14) d'une acquisition d'IRM encodée par écoulement (FE) à un côté
de l'anatomie de cible dans une première direction, x, des trois directions orthogonales
x, y, et z, associées avec un scanner d'IRM ;
la réalisation (16) d'une acquisition d'IRM FE à deux côtés, intercalés, de l'anatomie
de cible dans la deuxième direction, y, du scanner d'IRM, l'acquisition d'IRM FE à
deux côtés, intercalée, comprenant en alternance une polarité d'un gradient de FE
entre les phases cardiaques successives ; la réalisation (18) d'une acquisition d'IRM
FE à un côté ou à deux côtés dans la troisième direction, z, du scanner d'IRM ;
la production (12) d'ensembles de données de FE à résolution dans le temps successifs
de l'anatomie de cible des acquisitions d'IRM FE à un côté et FE à deux côtés, intercalés
; et
le calcul (20) d'une phase de bruit de fond compensée par écoulement (FC) des ensembles
de données de FE.
9. Procédé selon la revendication 8,
dans lequel les trois directions orthogonales comprennent une direction d'encodage
de phase, une direction d'encodage de fréquence et une direction d'encodage de tranche
du scanner ; et
dans lequel l'acquisition d'IRM FE à deux côtés, intercalés, est appliquée dans la
direction d'encodage de phase.
10. Procédé selon la revendication 9,
dans lequel l'acquisition d'IRM FE à un côté est appliquée dans une ou plusieurs de
la direction d'encodage de fréquence et de la direction d'encodage de tranche.
11. Procédé selon la revendication 9,
dans lequel l'acquisition d'IRM FE à un côté est appliquée aux deux direction d'encodage
de fréquence et direction d'encodage de tranche.