Free-breathing myocardial T1 mapping using inversion-recovery radial FLASH and motion-resolved model-based reconstruction

link to paper

Free-breathing myocardial T1 mapping using inversion-recovery radial FLASH and motion-resolved model-based reconstruction

Xiaoqing Wang, Sebastian Rosenzweig, Volkert Roeloffs, Moritz Blumenthal, Nick Scholand, Zhengguo Tan, H. Christian M. Holme, Christina Unterberg-Buchwald, Rabea Hinkel, Martin Uecker

Abstract

Purpose

To develop a free-breathing myocardial T1 mapping technique using inversion-recovery (IR) radial fast low-angle shot (FLASH) and calibrationless motion-resolved model-based reconstruction.

Methods

Free-running (free-breathing, retrospective cardiac gating) IR radial FLASH is used for data acquisition at 3T. First, to reduce the waiting time between inversions, an analytical formula is derived that takes the incomplete T1 recovery into account for an accurate T1 calculation. Second, the respiratory motion signal is estimated from the k-space center of the contrast varying acquisition using an adapted singular spectrum analysis (SSA-FARY) technique. Third, a motion-resolved model-based reconstruction is used to estimate both parameter and coil sensitivity maps directly from the sorted k-space data. Thus, spatiotemporal total variation, in addition to the spatial sparsity constraints, can be directly applied to the parameter maps. Validations are performed on an experimental phantom, 11 human subjects, and a young landrace pig with myocardial infarction.

Results

In comparison to an IR spin-echo reference, phantom results confirm good T1 accuracy, when reducing the waiting time from 5 s to 1 s using the new correction. The motion-resolved model-based reconstruction further improves T1 precision compared to the spatial regularization-only reconstruction. Aside from showing that a reliable respiratory motion signal can be estimated using modified SSA-FARY, in vivo studies demonstrate that dynamic myocardial T1 maps can be obtained within 2 min with good precision and repeatability.

Conclusion

Motion-resolved myocardial T1 mapping during free-breathing with good accuracy, precision and repeatability can be achieved by combining inversion-recovery radial FLASH, self-gating and a calibrationless motion-resolved model-based reconstruction.