4.5 Article

An improved asymmetric susceptibility tensor imaging model with frequency offset correction

期刊

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE
卷 89, 期 2, 页码 828-844

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mrm.29494

关键词

asymmetric susceptibility tensor; frequency model; frequency offset correction; STI

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This study proposed an improved reconstruction method for susceptibility tensor imaging (STI), which reduces the effects of non-bulk-magnetic-susceptibility (NBMS) related frequency shifts on the susceptibility tensors in the brain white matter. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves better reconstruction performance in simulation, ex vivo mouse brain, and in vivo human brain data.
Purpose To improve susceptibility tensor imaging (STI) reconstruction using the asymmetric STI model with the correction of non-bulk-magnetic-susceptibility (NBMS) effects. Method A frequency offset term was introduced into the asymmetric STI model to account for the bias between measured MRI frequency signals and conventional susceptibility tensor models because of NBMS contributions. Experiments were conducted to compare the proposed model with conventional STI, conventional STI with the proposed frequency offset correction, and asymmetric STI on simulation, ex vivo mouse brain, and in vivo human brain data. Results In the simulation where NBMS contributions are head rotation-invariant, the proposed method achieves the lowest errors in mean magnetic susceptibility (MMS) and magnetic susceptibility anisotropy (MSA) and is more robust to noise in the estimation of principal eigenvector (PEV). When considering the head orientation dependency of NBMS contributions, the proposed method shows advantages in estimating MSA and PEV. On the mouse and human brain data, the proposed method produces more reliable MSA maps and more consistent white matter fiber directions when referring to those from DTI than the compared STI methods. Conclusion The proposed method can reduce the effects of NBMS-related frequency shifts on the susceptibility tensors in the brain white matter. This study inspires STI reconstruction from the perspective of better modeling the sources of frequency shifts.

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