4.7 Article

A robust multi-scale approach to quantitative susceptibility mapping

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 183, Issue -, Pages 7-24

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.07.065

Keywords

Magnetic susceptibility; Quantitative MRI; Iron mapping; Venography; Variational regularisation; Laplacian pyramid

Funding

  1. Wellcome [203147/Z/16/Z]
  2. EU Joint Programme - Neurodegenerative Disease Research, JPND
  3. FONDECYT [1161448]
  4. CONICYT [ACT1416]
  5. Becas de Doctorado Nacional CONICYT [Folio 21150369]
  6. NIH [1R01-DA021146]
  7. MRC
  8. Spinal Research Charity through the ERA-NET Neuron [MR/R000050/1]
  9. MRC [MR/R000050/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping (QSM), best known as a surrogate for tissue iron content, is becoming a highly relevant MRI contrast for monitoring cellular and vascular status in aging, addiction, traumatic brain injury and, in general, a wide range of neurological disorders. In this study we present a new Bayesian QSM algorithm, named Multi-Scale Dipole Inversion (MSDI), which builds on the nonlinear Morphology-Enabled Dipole Inversion (nMEDI) framework, incorporating three additional features: (i) improved implementation of Laplace's equation to reduce the influence of background fields through variable harmonic filtering and subsequent deconvolution, (ii) improved error control through dynamic phase-reliability compensation across spatial scales, and (iii) scalewise use of the morphological prior. More generally, this new pre-conditioned QSM formalism aims to reduce the impact of dipole-incompatible fields and measurement errors such as flow effects, poor signal-to-noise ratio or other data inconsistencies that can lead to streaking and shadowing artefacts. In terms of performance, MSDI is the first algorithm to rank in the top-10 for all metrics evaluated in the 2016 QSM Reconstruction Challenge. It also demonstrated lower variance than nMEDI and more stable behaviour in scan-rescan reproducibility experiments for different MRI acquisitions at 3 and 7 Tesla. In the present work, we also explored new forms of susceptibility MRI contrast making explicit use of the differential information across spatial scales. Specifically, we show MSDI-derived examples of: (i) enhanced anatomical detail with susceptibility inversions from short-range dipole fields (hereby referred to as High-Pass Susceptibility Mapping or HPSM), (ii) high specificity to venousblood susceptibilities for highly regularised HPSM (making a case for MSDI-based Venography or VenoMSDI), (iii) improved tissue specificity (and possibly statistical conditioning) for Macroscopic-Vessel Suppressed Susceptibility Mapping (MVSSM), and (iv) high spatial specificity and definition for HPSM-based SusceptibilityWeighted Imaging (HPSM-SWI) and related intensity projections.

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