27,921 research outputs found
Learning-based Single-step Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reconstruction Without Brain Extraction
Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) estimates the underlying tissue
magnetic susceptibility from MRI gradient-echo phase signal and typically
requires several processing steps. These steps involve phase unwrapping, brain
volume extraction, background phase removal and solving an ill-posed inverse
problem. The resulting susceptibility map is known to suffer from inaccuracy
near the edges of the brain tissues, in part due to imperfect brain extraction,
edge erosion of the brain tissue and the lack of phase measurement outside the
brain. This inaccuracy has thus hindered the application of QSM for measuring
the susceptibility of tissues near the brain edges, e.g., quantifying cortical
layers and generating superficial venography. To address these challenges, we
propose a learning-based QSM reconstruction method that directly estimates the
magnetic susceptibility from total phase images without the need for brain
extraction and background phase removal, referred to as autoQSM. The neural
network has a modified U-net structure and is trained using QSM maps computed
by a two-step QSM method. 209 healthy subjects with ages ranging from 11 to 82
years were employed for patch-wise network training. The network was validated
on data dissimilar to the training data, e.g. in vivo mouse brain data and
brains with lesions, which suggests that the network has generalized and
learned the underlying mathematical relationship between magnetic field
perturbation and magnetic susceptibility. AutoQSM was able to recover magnetic
susceptibility of anatomical structures near the edges of the brain including
the veins covering the cortical surface, spinal cord and nerve tracts near the
mouse brain boundaries. The advantages of high-quality maps, no need for brain
volume extraction and high reconstruction speed demonstrate its potential for
future applications.Comment: 26 page
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Coil combination using linear deconvolution in k-space for phase imaging
Background: The combination of multi-channel data is a critical step for the imaging of phase and susceptibility contrast in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Magnitude-weighted phase combination methods often produce noise and aliasing artifacts in the magnitude images at accelerated imaging sceneries. To address this issue, an optimal coil combination method through deconvolution in k-space is proposed in this paper.
Methods: The proposed method firstly employs the sum-of-squares and phase aligning method to yield a complex reference coil image which is then used to calculate the coil sensitivity and its Fourier transform. Then, the coil k-space combining weights is computed, taking into account the truncated frequency data of coil sensitivity and the acquired k-space data. Finally, combining the coil k-space data with the acquired weights generates the k-space data of proton distribution, with which both phase and magnitude information can be obtained straightforwardly. Both phantom and in vivo imaging experiments were conducted to evaluate the performance of the proposed method.
Results: Compared with magnitude-weighted method and MCPC-C, the proposed method can alleviate the phase cancellation in coil combination, resulting in a less wrapped phase.
Conclusions: The proposed method provides an effective and efficient approach to combine multiple coil image in parallel MRI reconstruction, and has potential to benefit routine clinical practice in the future
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