Live-view 4D GRASP MRI: A framework for robust real-time respiratory motion tracking with a sub-second imaging latency

link to paper

Live-view 4D GRASP MRI: A framework for robust real-time respiratory motion tracking with a sub-second imaging latency

Li Feng

Abstract

Purpose

To propose a framework called live-view golden-angle radial sparse parallel (GRASP) MRI for low-latency and high-fidelity real-time volumetric MRI.

Methods

Live-view GRASP MRI has two stages. The first one is called an off-view stage and the second one is called a live-view stage. In the off-view stage, 3D k-space data and 2D navigators are acquired alternatively using a new navi-stack-of-stars sampling scheme. A 4D motion database is then generated that contains time-resolved MR images at a sub-second temporal resolution, and each image is linked to a 2D navigator. In the live-view stage, only 2D navigators are acquired. At each time point, a live-view 2D navigator is matched to all the off-view 2D navigators. A 3D image that is linked to the best-matched off-view 2D navigator is then selected for this time point. This framework places the typical acquisition and reconstruction burden of MRI in the off-view stage, enabling low-latency real-time 3D imaging in the live-view stage. The accuracy of live-view GRASP MRI and the robustness of 2D navigators for characterizing respiratory variations and/or body movements were assessed.

Results

Live-view GRASP MRI can efficiently generate real-time volumetric images that match well with the ground-truth references, with an imaging latency below 500 ms. Compared to 1D navigators, 2D navigators enable more reliable characterization of respiratory variations and/or body movements that may occur throughout the two imaging stages.

Conclusion

Live-view GRASP MRI represents a novel, accurate, and robust framework for real-time volumetric imaging, which can potentially be applied for motion adaptive radiotherapy on MRI-Linac.