12 research outputs found

    Incomplete spectrum QSM using support information

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    INTRODUCTION: Reconstructing a bounded object from incomplete k-space data is a well posed problem, and it was recently shown that this incomplete spectrum approach can be used to reconstruct undersampled MRI images with similar quality to compressed sensing approaches. Here, we apply this incomplete spectrum approach to the field-to-source inverse problem encountered in quantitative magnetic susceptibility mapping (QSM). The field-to-source problem is an ill-posed problem because of conical regions in frequency space where the dipole kernel is zero or very small, which leads to the kernel's inverse being ill-defined. These "ill-posed" regions typically lead to streaking artifacts in QSM reconstructions. In contrast to compressed sensing, our approach relies on knowledge of the image-space support, more commonly referred to as the mask, of our object as well as the region in k-space with ill-defined values. In the QSM case, this mask is usually available, as it is required for most QSM background field removal and reconstruction methods. METHODS: We tuned the incomplete spectrum method (mask and band-limit) for QSM on a simulated dataset from the most recent QSM challenge and validated the QSM reconstruction results on brain images acquired in five healthy volunteers, comparing incomplete spectrum QSM to current state-of-the art-methods: FANSI, nonlinear dipole inversion, and conventional thresholded k-space division. RESULTS: Without additional regularization, incomplete spectrum QSM performs slightly better than direct QSM reconstruction methods such as thresholded k-space division (PSNR of 39.9 vs. 39.4 of TKD on a simulated dataset) and provides susceptibility values in key iron-rich regions similar or slightly lower than state-of-the-art algorithms, but did not improve the PSNR in comparison to FANSI or nonlinear dipole inversion. With added (â„“1-wavelet based) regularization the new approach produces results similar to compressed sensing based reconstructions (at sufficiently high levels of regularization). DISCUSSION: Incomplete spectrum QSM provides a new approach to handle the "ill-posed" regions in the frequency-space data input to QSM

    Incomplete spectrum QSM using support information

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    IntroductionReconstructing a bounded object from incomplete k-space data is a well posed problem, and it was recently shown that this incomplete spectrum approach can be used to reconstruct undersampled MRI images with similar quality to compressed sensing approaches. Here, we apply this incomplete spectrum approach to the field-to-source inverse problem encountered in quantitative magnetic susceptibility mapping (QSM). The field-to-source problem is an ill-posed problem because of conical regions in frequency space where the dipole kernel is zero or very small, which leads to the kernel's inverse being ill-defined. These “ill-posed” regions typically lead to streaking artifacts in QSM reconstructions. In contrast to compressed sensing, our approach relies on knowledge of the image-space support, more commonly referred to as the mask, of our object as well as the region in k-space with ill-defined values. In the QSM case, this mask is usually available, as it is required for most QSM background field removal and reconstruction methods.MethodsWe tuned the incomplete spectrum method (mask and band-limit) for QSM on a simulated dataset from the most recent QSM challenge and validated the QSM reconstruction results on brain images acquired in five healthy volunteers, comparing incomplete spectrum QSM to current state-of-the art-methods: FANSI, nonlinear dipole inversion, and conventional thresholded k-space division.ResultsWithout additional regularization, incomplete spectrum QSM performs slightly better than direct QSM reconstruction methods such as thresholded k-space division (PSNR of 39.9 vs. 39.4 of TKD on a simulated dataset) and provides susceptibility values in key iron-rich regions similar or slightly lower than state-of-the-art algorithms, but did not improve the PSNR in comparison to FANSI or nonlinear dipole inversion. With added (ℓ1-wavelet based) regularization the new approach produces results similar to compressed sensing based reconstructions (at sufficiently high levels of regularization).DiscussionIncomplete spectrum QSM provides a new approach to handle the “ill-posed” regions in the frequency-space data input to QSM

    Streaking artifact suppression of quantitative susceptibility mapping reconstructions via L1-norm data fidelity optimization (L1-QSM)

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    Purpose: The presence of dipole-inconsistent data due to substantial noise or artifacts causes streaking artifacts in quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) reconstructions. Often used Bayesian approaches rely on regularizers, which in turn yield reduced sharpness. To overcome this problem, we present a novel L1-norm data fidelity approach that is robust with respect to outliers, and therefore prevents streaking artifacts. Methods: QSM functionals are solved with linear and nonlinear L1-norm data fidelity terms using functional augmentation, and are compared with equivalent L2-norm methods. Algorithms were tested on synthetic data, with phase inconsistencies added to mimic lesions, QSM Challenge 2.0 data, and in vivo brain images with hemorrhages. Results: The nonlinear L1-norm-based approach achieved the best overall error metric scores and better streaking artifact suppression. Notably, L1-norm methods could reconstruct QSM images without using a brain mask, with similar regularization weights for different data fidelity weighting or masking setups. Conclusion: The proposed L1-approach provides a robust method to prevent streaking artifacts generated by dipole-inconsistent data, renders brain mask calculation unessential, and opens novel challenging clinical applications such asassessing brain hemorrhages and cortical layers

    xQSM: Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping with Octave Convolutional and Noise Regularized Neural Networks

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    Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) is a valuable magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast mechanism that has demonstrated broad clinical applications. However, the image reconstruction of QSM is challenging due to its ill-posed dipole inversion process. In this study, a new deep learning method for QSM reconstruction, namely xQSM, was designed by introducing modified state-of-the-art octave convolutional layers into the U-net backbone. The xQSM method was compared with recentlyproposed U-net-based and conventional regularizationbased methods, using peak signal to noise ratio (PSNR), structural similarity (SSIM), and region-of-interest measurements. The results from a numerical phantom, a simulated human brain, four in vivo healthy human subjects, a multiple sclerosis patient, a glioblastoma patient, as well as a healthy mouse brain showed that the xQSM led to suppressed artifacts than the conventional methods, and enhanced susceptibility contrast, particularly in the ironrich deep grey matter region, than the original U-net, consistently. The xQSM method also substantially shortened the reconstruction time from minutes using conventional iterative methods to only a few seconds.Comment: 37 pages, 10 figures, 3 tabl

    Plug-and-Play Latent Feature Editing for Orientation-Adaptive Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Neural Networks

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    Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) is a post-processing technique for deriving tissue magnetic susceptibility distribution from MRI phase measurements. Deep learning (DL) algorithms hold great potential for solving the ill-posed QSM reconstruction problem. However, a significant challenge facing current DL-QSM approaches is their limited adaptability to magnetic dipole field orientation variations during training and testing. In this work, we propose a novel Orientation-Adaptive Latent Feature Editing (OA-LFE) module to learn the encoding of acquisition orientation vectors and seamlessly integrate them into the latent features of deep networks. Importantly, it can be directly Plug-and-Play (PnP) into various existing DL-QSM architectures, enabling reconstructions of QSM from arbitrary magnetic dipole orientations. Its effectiveness is demonstrated by combining the OA-LFE module into our previously proposed phase-to-susceptibility single-step instant QSM (iQSM) network, which was initially tailored for pure-axial acquisitions. The proposed OA-LFE-empowered iQSM, which we refer to as iQSM+, is trained in a self-supervised manner on a specially-designed simulation brain dataset. Comprehensive experiments are conducted on simulated and in vivo human brain datasets, encompassing subjects ranging from healthy individuals to those with pathological conditions. These experiments involve various MRI platforms (3T and 7T) and aim to compare our proposed iQSM+ against several established QSM reconstruction frameworks, including the original iQSM. The iQSM+ yields QSM images with significantly improved accuracies and mitigates artifacts, surpassing other state-of-the-art DL-QSM algorithms.Comment: 13pages, 9figure

    Recommended Implementation of Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping for Clinical Research in The Brain: A Consensus of the ISMRM Electro-Magnetic Tissue Properties Study Group

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    This article provides recommendations for implementing quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) for clinical brain research. It is a consensus of the ISMRM Electro-Magnetic Tissue Properties Study Group. While QSM technical development continues to advance rapidly, the current QSM methods have been demonstrated to be repeatable and reproducible for generating quantitative tissue magnetic susceptibility maps in the brain. However, the many QSM approaches available give rise to the need in the neuroimaging community for guidelines on implementation. This article describes relevant considerations and provides specific implementation recommendations for all steps in QSM data acquisition, processing, analysis, and presentation in scientific publications. We recommend that data be acquired using a monopolar 3D multi-echo GRE sequence, that phase images be saved and exported in DICOM format and unwrapped using an exact unwrapping approach. Multi-echo images should be combined before background removal, and a brain mask created using a brain extraction tool with the incorporation of phase-quality-based masking. Background fields should be removed within the brain mask using a technique based on SHARP or PDF, and the optimization approach to dipole inversion should be employed with a sparsity-based regularization. Susceptibility values should be measured relative to a specified reference, including the common reference region of whole brain as a region of interest in the analysis, and QSM results should be reported with - as a minimum - the acquisition and processing specifications listed in the last section of the article. These recommendations should facilitate clinical QSM research and lead to increased harmonization in data acquisition, analysis, and reporting
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