Motion compensated self supervised deep learning for highly accelerated 3D ultrashort Echo time pulmonary MRI

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Motion compensated self supervised deep learning for highly accelerated 3D ultrashort Echo time pulmonary MRI

Zachary Miller, Kevin M. Johnson

Abstract

Purpose

To investigate motion compensated, self-supervised, model based deep learning (MBDL) as a method to reconstruct free breathing, 3D pulmonary UTE acquisitions.

Theory and Methods

A self-supervised eXtra dimension MBDL architecture (XD-MBDL) was developed that combined respiratory states to reconstruct a single high-quality 3D image. Non-rigid motion fields were incorporated into this architecture by estimating motion fields from a lower resolution motion resolved (XD-GRASP) reconstruction. Motion compensated XD-MBDL was evaluated on lung UTE datasets with and without contrast and compared to constrained reconstructions and variants of self-supervised MBDL that do not account for dynamic respiratory states or leverage motion correction.

Results

Images reconstructed using XD-MBDL demonstrate improved image quality as measured by apparent SNR (aSNR), contrast to noise ratio (CNR), and visual assessment relative to self-supervised MBDL approaches that do not account for dynamic respiratory states, XD-GRASP and a recently proposed motion compensated iterative reconstruction strategy (iMoCo). Additionally, XD-MBDL reduced reconstruction time relative to both XD-GRASP and iMoCo.

Conclusion

A method was developed to allow self-supervised MBDL to combine multiple respiratory states to reconstruct a single image. This method was combined with graphics processing unit (GPU)-based image registration to further improve reconstruction quality. This approach showed promising results reconstructing a user-selected respiratory phase from free breathing 3D pulmonary UTE acquisitions.