4.5 Article

Nonrigid Autofocus Motion Correction for Coronary MR Angiography with a 3D Cones Trajectory

Journal

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE
Volume 72, Issue 2, Pages 347-361

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mrm.24924

Keywords

coronary angiography; motion correction; autofocus; nonrigid; navigator image

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DGE-0645962]
  2. National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship [32 CFR 168a]
  3. John and Kate Wakerly Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  4. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 HL039297, R01 HL075803]
  5. GE Healthcare

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Purpose: To implement a nonrigid autofocus motion correction technique to improve respiratory motion correction of free-breathing whole-heart coronary magnetic resonance angiography acquisitions using an image-navigated 3D cones sequence. Methods: 2D image navigators acquired every heartbeat are used to measure superior-inferior, anterior-posterior, and right-left translation of the heart during a free-breathing coronary magnetic resonance angiography scan using a 3D cones read-out trajectory. Various tidal respiratory motion patterns are modeled by independently scaling the three measured displacement trajectories. These scaled motion trajectories are used for 3D translational compensation of the acquired data, and a bank of motion-compensated images is reconstructed. From this bank, a gradient entropy focusing metric is used to generate a nonrigid motion-corrected image on a pixel-by-pixel basis. The performance of the autofocus motion correction technique is compared with rigid-body translational correction and no correction in phantom, volunteer, and patient studies. Results: Nonrigid autofocus motion correction yields improved image quality compared to rigid-body-corrected images and uncorrected images. Quantitative vessel sharpness measurements indicate superiority of the proposed technique in 14 out of 15 coronary segments from three patient and two volunteer studies. Conclusion: The proposed technique corrects nonrigid motion artifacts in free-breathing 3D cones acquisitions, improving image quality compared to rigid-body motion correction. (C) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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