4.5 Article

Speeding up the clinical routine: Compressed sensing for 2D imaging of lumbar spine disc herniation

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY
Volume 140, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2021.109738

Keywords

Acceleration; Magnetic resonance imaging; Lumbar vertebrae; Image processing; Prospective studies

Funding

  1. German Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology (Deutsche Gesellschaft fur muskuloskelettale Radiologie)

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In this study, the new acceleration technique Compressed SENSE (CS-SENSE) and different reconstruction methods for the lumbar spine were tested. Results showed that CS-SENSE outperformed SENSE and CS-Auto in terms of RMSE, SSIM, and subjective rating. Patient image quality remained unchanged up to CS-SENSE 3 TSE with a 43% reduction in scan time.
Purpose: Increasing economic pressure and patient demands for comfort require an ever-increasing acceleration of scan times without compromising diagnostic certainty. This study tested the new acceleration technique Compressed SENSE (CS-SENSE) as well as different reconstruction methods for the lumbar spine. Methods: In this prospective study, 10 volunteers and 14 patients with lumbar disc herniation were scanned using a sagittal 2D T2 turbo spin echo (TSE) sequence applying different acceleration factors of SENSE and CS-SENSE. Gradient echo (GRE), autocalibration (CS-Auto) and TSE prescans were tested for reconstruction. Images were analysed by two readers regarding anatomical delineation, diagnostic certainty (for patients only) and image quality as well as objectively calculating the root mean square error (RMSE), structural similarity index (SSIM), SNR and CNR. The Friedman test and Chi-squared were used for ordinal, ANOVA for repeated measurements and Tukey Kramer test for continuous data. Cohen's kappawas calculated for interreader reliability. Results: CS-SENSE outperformed SENSE and CS-Auto regarding RMSE (e.g. CS-SENSE 1.5: 43.03 +/- 11.64 versus SENSE 1.5: 80.41 +/- 17.66; p = 0.0038) and SSIM as well as in the subjective rating for CS-SENSE 3 TSE. In the patient setting image quality was unchanged in all subjective criteria up to CS-SENSE 3 TSE (all p > 0.05) compared to standard T2 with 43 % less scan time while the GRE prescan only allowed a reduction of 32 %. Conclusion: Combining a TSE prescan with CS-SENSE enables significant scan time reductions with unchanged ratings for lumbar spine disc herniation making this superior to the currently used SENSE acceleration or GRE reconstructions.

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