Cardiac DTI using short-axis PROPELLER: A feasibility study

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Cardiac DTI using short-axis PROPELLER: A feasibility study

Mehdi Sadighi, Danielle Kara, Dingheng Mai, Khoi Nguyen, Shi Chen, Deborah Kwon, Christopher Nguyen

Abstract

Purpose

We aimed to develop a free-breathing (FB) cardiac DTI (cDTI) method based on short-axis PROPELLER (SAP) and M2 motion compensated spin-echo EPI (SAP-M2-EPI) to mitigate geometric distortion and eliminate aliasing in acquired diffusion-weighted (DW) images, particularly in patients with a higher body mass index (BMI).

Theory and Methods

The study involved 10 healthy volunteers whose BMI values fell into specific categories: BMI <25 (4 volunteers), 25< BMI <28 (5 volunteers), and BMI >30 (1 volunteer). We compared DTI parameters, including fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), and helix angle transmurality (HAT), between SAP-M2-EPI and M2-ssEPI. To evaluate the performance of SAP-M2-EPI in reducing geometric distortions in the left ventricle (LV) compared to CINE and M2-ssEPI, we utilized the DICE similarity coefficient (DSC) and assessed misregistration area.

Results

In all volunteers, SAP-M2-EPI yielded high-quality LV DWIs without aliasing, demonstrating significantly reduced geometric distortion (with an average DSC of 0.92 and average misregistration area of 90 mm2) and diminished signal loss due to bulk motion when compared to M2-ssEPI. DTI parameter maps exhibited consistent patterns across slices without motion related artifacts.

Conclusion

SAP-M2-EPI facilitates free-breathing cDTI of the entire LV, effectively eliminating aliasing and minimizing geometric distortion compared to M2-ssEPI. Furthermore, it preserves accurate quantification of myocardial microstructure.