Background
Dynamic gadolinium contrast-enhanced (DCE) vessel wall imaging has been used to quantitatively assess the inflammatory status of carotid plaques[1]. However, several limitations of current techniques that may potentially compromise quantitative accuracy include: a) vessel wall blurring during high-spatial-resolution imaging due to arterial pulsation; b) inadequate separation between vessel wall and lumen; and c) relatively low temporal resolution (~20-40 sec). Recently, a black-blood DCE technique using ECG-triggering and saturation and double-inversion combined (SRDIR) preparation were proposed to overcome the first two limitations yet at the expense of temporal resolution[2]. This work aimed to accelerate the acquisition by using compressed sensing that has been applied to dynamic MRI studies[3].
Methods
The major modification in the SRDIR DCE sequence is 2D golden-angle radial sampling in the both bright-blood and black-blood interleaf scans. This permits a retrospective selection on the temporal resolution. Image reconstruction was performed using split bregman method for l1 regularized optimization problems. The cost function is ||Au-b||22+μ||▽u||1+γ||u-u_ref||1, i.e. the sum of a data fidelity term, a total variation (TV) sparsity term, and a temporal sparsity term. Volunteer data were acquired at 3T (Siemens Magnetom Verio) using a 4-channel bilateral carotid coil, with the imaging slices centered at the carotid bifurcations. Imaging parameters included: spatial resolution = 0.6 × 0.6 × 4 mm3, 4 slices, ECG triggering, 30 projections/R-R, 8 s/frame. Fifteen-minute continuous golden-angle radial sampling was conducted along with intravenous contrast (0.1 mmol/kg gadobenate dimeglumine) injection and saline flush (20 ml) both at 0.2 ml/s. Through ROI analysis from the bright-blood image series and dark-blood image series respectively, signal intensity change of blood pool and vessel wall was captured and used to calculate kinetic parameters.
Results
By using our new method, SNR was improved from 22.28 to 76.27 compared to conventional radial regridding method. In dark-blood image series, the vessel wall was nicely preserved (Figure 1). Because of high temporal resolution, the change in the signal intensity, especially the peak, was better captured compared to previous work (Figure 2). From this subject, Ktrans = 0.12 min-1, Vp = 0.4, Kep = 0.44 min-1.
Conclusions
To our knowledge, this is the first study to combine compressed sensing with black blood carotid DCE MRI. The initial data indicates that at least 2-fold temporal resolution increase is possible compared to previous carotid DCE studies by using the compressed sensing approach.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
This article is published under an open access license. Please check the 'Copyright Information' section either on this page or in the PDF for details of this license and what re-use is permitted. If your intended use exceeds what is permitted by the license or if you are unable to locate the licence and re-use information, please contact the Rights and Permissions team.
About this article
Cite this article
Zhou, ZW., Sharif, B., Fan, Z. et al. High spatial and temporal resolution black-blood dynamic contrast-enhanced carotid artery wall MRI using compressed sensing. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson 16 (Suppl 1), W40 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-16-S1-W40
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-16-S1-W40