4.5 Article

Compressed sensing to accelerate magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging: evaluation and application to 23Na-imaging of mouse hearts

期刊

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12968-015-0149-6

关键词

Compressed sensing; Magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging; Chemical shift imaging; Mouse; Sodium

资金

  1. MRC/EPSRC Grant [G0600829]
  2. Wellcome Trust Core Award [090532/Z/09/Z]
  3. MRC [G0600829] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. British Heart Foundation [FS/11/50/29038, RG/13/8/30266] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. Medical Research Council [G0600829] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Background: Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging (MRSI) has wide applicability for non-invasive biochemical assessment in clinical and pre-clinical applications but suffers from long scan times. Compressed sensing (CS) has been successfully applied to clinical H-1 MRSI, however a detailed evaluation of CS for conventional chemical shift imaging is lacking. Here we evaluate the performance of CS accelerated MRSI, and specifically apply it to accelerate Na-23-MRSI on mouse hearts in vivo at 9.4 T. Methods: Synthetic phantom data representing a simplified section across a mouse thorax were used to evaluate the fidelity of the CS reconstruction for varying levels of under-sampling, resolution and signal-to-noise ratios (SNR). The amplitude of signals arising from within a compartment, and signal contamination arising from outside the compartment relative to noise-free Fourier-transformed (FT) data were determined. Simulation results were subsequently verified experimentally in phantoms and in three mouse hearts in vivo. Results: CS reconstructed MRSI data are scaled linearly relative to absolute signal intensities from the fully-sampled FT reconstructed case (R-2 > 0.8, p-value < 0.001). Higher acceleration factors resulted in a denoising of the reconstructed spectra, but also in an increased blurring of compartment boundaries, particularly at lower spatial resolutions. Increasing resolution and SNR decreased cross-compartment contamination and yielded signal amplitudes closer to the FT data. Proof-of-concept high-resolution, 3-fold accelerated Na-23-amplitude maps of murine myocardium could be obtained within similar to 23 mins. Conclusions: Relative signal amplitudes (i.e. metabolite ratios) and absolute quantification of metabolite concentrations can be accurately determined with up to 5-fold under-sampled, CS-reconstructed MRSI. Although this work focused on murine cardiac Na-23-MRSI, the results are equally applicable to other nuclei and tissues (e.g. H-1 MRSI in brain). Significant reduction in MRSI scan time will reduce the burden on the subject, increase scanner throughput, and may open new avenues for (pre-) clinical metabolic studies.

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