286 research outputs found

    Visualization and Localization of Interventional Devices with MRI by Susceptibility Mapping

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    Recently, interventional procedures can be performed with the visual assistance of MRI. However, the devices used in these procedures, such as brachytherapy seeds, biopsy needles, markers, and stents, have a large magnetic susceptibility that leads to severe signal loss and distortion in the MRI images and degrades the accuracy of the localization. Right now, there is no effective way to correctly identify, localize and visualize these interventional devices in MRI images. In this dissertation, we proposed a method to improve the accuracy of localization and visualization by generating positive contrast of the interventional devices using a regularized L1 minimization algorithm. Specifically, the spin-echo sequence with a shifted 180-degree pulse is used to acquire high SNR data. A short shift time is used to avoid severe phase wrap. A phase unwrapping method based on Markov Random Field using Highest-Confidence-First algorithm is proposed to unwrap the phase image. Then the phase images with different shifted time are used to calculate the field map. Next, L1 regularized deconvolution is performed to calculate the susceptibility map. With much higher susceptibility of the interventional devices than the background tissue, the interventional devices show positive-contrast in the susceptibility image. Computer simulations were performed to study the effect of the signal-to-noise ratio, resolution, orientation and size of the interventional devices on the accuracy of the results. Experiments were performed using gelatin and tissue phantom with brachytherapy seeds, gelatin phantoms with platinum wires, and water phantom with titanium needles. The results show that the proposed method provide positive contrast images of these interventional devices, differentiate them from other structures in the MRI images, and improves the visualization and localization of the devices

    How to find real-world applications for compressive sensing

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    The potential of compressive sensing (CS) has spurred great interest in the research community and is a fast growing area of research. However, research translating CS theory into practical hardware and demonstrating clear and significant benefits with this hardware over current, conventional imaging techniques has been limited. This article helps researchers to find those niche applications where the CS approach provides substantial gain over conventional approaches by articulating lessons learned in finding one such application; sea skimming missile detection. As a proof of concept, it is demonstrated that a simplified CS missile detection architecture and algorithm provides comparable results to the conventional imaging approach but using a smaller FPA. The primary message is that all of the excitement surrounding CS is necessary and appropriate for encouraging our creativity but we all must also take off our "rose colored glasses" and critically judge our ideas, methods and results relative to conventional imaging approaches.Comment: 10 page

    Shearlet-based compressed sensing for fast 3D cardiac MR imaging using iterative reweighting

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    High-resolution three-dimensional (3D) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is a valuable medical imaging technique, but its widespread application in clinical practice is hampered by long acquisition times. Here we present a novel compressed sensing (CS) reconstruction approach using shearlets as a sparsifying transform allowing for fast 3D CMR (3DShearCS). Shearlets are mathematically optimal for a simplified model of natural images and have been proven to be more efficient than classical systems such as wavelets. Data is acquired with a 3D Radial Phase Encoding (RPE) trajectory and an iterative reweighting scheme is used during image reconstruction to ensure fast convergence and high image quality. In our in-vivo cardiac MRI experiments we show that the proposed method 3DShearCS has lower relative errors and higher structural similarity compared to the other reconstruction techniques especially for high undersampling factors, i.e. short scan times. In this paper, we further show that 3DShearCS provides improved depiction of cardiac anatomy (measured by assessing the sharpness of coronary arteries) and two clinical experts qualitatively analyzed the image quality
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