Browsing by Author "Kunze, Karl P."
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- Item3D whole-heart grey-blood late gadolinium enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging(2021) Milotta, Giorgia; Munoz, Camila; Kunze, Karl P.; Neji, Radhouene; Figliozzi, Stefano; Chiribiri, Amedeo; Hajhosseiny, R.; Masci, Pier Giorgio; Prieto Vásquez, Claudia; Botnar, René MichaelAbstract Purpose To develop a free-breathing whole-heart isotropic-resolution 3D late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) sequence with Dixon-encoding, which provides co-registered 3D grey-blood phase-sensitive inversion-recovery (PSIR) and complementary 3D fat volumes in a single scan of < 7 min. Methods A free-breathing 3D PSIR LGE sequence with dual-echo Dixon readout with a variable density Cartesian trajectory with acceleration factor of 3 is proposed. Image navigators are acquired to correct both inversion recovery (IR)-prepared and reference volumes for 2D translational respiratory motion, enabling motion compensated PSIR reconstruction with 100% respiratory scan efficiency. An intermediate PSIR reconstruction is performed between the in-phase echoes to estimate the signal polarity which is subsequently applied to the IR-prepared water volume to generate a water grey-blood PSIR image. The IR-prepared water volume is obtained using a water/fat separation algorithm from the corresponding dual-echo readout. The complementary fat-volume is obtained after water/fat separation of the reference volume. Ten patients (6 with myocardial scar) were scanned with the proposed water/fat grey-blood 3D PSIR LGE sequence at 1.5 T and compared to breath-held grey-blood 2D LGE sequence in terms of contrast ratio (CR), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), scar depiction, scar transmurality, scar mass and image quality. Results Comparable CRs (p = 0.98, 0.40 and 0.83) and CNRs (p = 0.29, 0.40 and 0.26) for blood-myocardium, scar-myocardium and scar-blood respectively were obtained with the proposed free-breathing 3D water/fat LGE and 2D clinical LGE scan. Excellent agreement for scar detection, scar transmurality, scar mass (bias = 0.29%) and image quality scores (from 1: non-diagnostic to 4: excellent) of 3.8 ± 0.42 and 3.6 ± 0.69 (p > 0.99) were obtained with the 2D and 3D PSIR LGE approaches with comparable total acquisition time (p = 0.29). Similar agreement in intra and inter-observer variability were obtained for the 2D and 3D acquisition respectively. Conclusion The proposed approach enabled the acquisition of free-breathing motion-compensated isotropic-resolution 3D grey-blood PSIR LGE and fat volumes. The proposed approach showed good agreement with conventional 2D LGE in terms of CR, scar depiction and scan time, while enabling free-breathing acquisition, whole-heart coverage, reformatting in arbitrary views and visualization of both water and fat information.
- ItemEvaluation of accelerated motion-compensated 3d water/fat late gadolinium enhanced MR for atrial wall imaging(SPRINGER, 2021) Munoz, Camila; Sim, Iain; Neji, Radhouene; Kunze, Karl P.; Masci, Pier Giorgio; Schmidt, Michaela; O'Neill, Mark; Williams, Steven; Botnar, Rene M.; Prieto, ClaudiaObjective 3D late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging is a promising non-invasive technique for the assessment of atrial fibrosis. However, current techniques result in prolonged and unpredictable scan times and high rates of non-diagnostic images. The purpose of this study was to compare the performance of a recently proposed accelerated respiratory motion-compensated 3D water/fat LGE technique with conventional 3D LGE for atrial wall imaging. Materials and methods 18 patients (age: 55.7 +/- 17.1 years) with atrial fibrillation underwent conventional diaphragmatic navigator gated inversion recovery (IR)-prepared 3D LGE (dNAV) and proposed image-navigator motion-corrected water/fat IR-prepared 3D LGE (iNAV) imaging. Images were assessed for image quality and presence of fibrosis by three expert observers. The scan time for both techniques was recorded. Results Image quality scores were improved with the proposed compared to the conventional method (iNAV: 3.1 +/- 1.0 vs. dNAV: 2.6 +/- 1.0, p = 0.0012, with 1: Non-diagnostic to 4: Full diagnostic). Furthermore, scan time for the proposed method was significantly shorter with a 59% reduction is scan time (4.5 +/- 1.2 min vs. 10.9 +/- 3.9 min, p < 0.0001). The images acquired with the proposed method were deemed as inconclusive less frequently than the conventional images (expert 1/expert 2: 4/7 dNAV and 2/4 iNAV images inconclusive). Discussion The motion-compensated water/fat LGE method enables atrial wall imaging with diagnostic quality comparable to the current conventional approach with a significantly shorter scan of about 5 min.
- ItemHigh-resolution non-contrast free-breathing coronary cardiovascular magnetic resonance angiography for detection of coronary artery disease : validation against invasive coronary angiography(2022) Nazir, Muhummad S.; Bustin, Aurélien; Hajhosseiny, Reza; Yazdani, Momina; Ryan, Matthew; Vergani, Vittoria; Neji, Radhouene; Kunze, Karl P.; Perera, Divaka; Botnar, René Michael; Prieto Vásquez, ClaudiaCoronary artery disease (CAD) is the single most common cause of death worldwide. Recent technological developments with coronary cardiovascular magnetic resonance angiography (CCMRA) allow high-resolution free-breathing imaging of the coronary arteries at submillimeter resolution without contrast in a predictable scan time of ~ 10 min. The objective of this study was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of high-resolution CCMRA for CAD detection against the gold standard of invasive coronary angiography (ICA). Methods: Forty-five patients (15 female, 62 ± 10 years) with suspected CAD underwent sub-millimeter-resolution (0.6 mm3) non-contrast CCMRA at 1.5T in this prospective clinical study from 2019–2020. Prior to CCMR, patients were given an intravenous beta blockers to optimize heart rate control and sublingual glyceryl trinitrate to promote coronary vasodilation. Obstructive CAD was defined by lesions with ≥ 50% stenosis by quantitative coronary angiography on ICA. Results: The mean duration of image acquisition was 10.4 ± 2.1 min. On a per patient analysis, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value (95% confidence intervals) were 95% (75–100), 54% (36–71), 60% (42–75) and 93% (70–100), respectively. On a per vessel analysis the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value (95% confidence intervals) were 80% (63–91), 83% (77–88), 49% (36–63) and 95% (90–98), respectively. Conclusion: As an important step towards clinical translation, we demonstrated a good diagnostic accuracy for CAD detection using high-resolution CCMRA, with high sensitivity and negative predictive value. The positive predictive value is moderate, and combination with CMR stress perfusion may improve the diagnostic accuracy. Future multicenter evaluation is now required
- ItemMotion-corrected whole-heart PET-MR for the simultaneous visualisation of coronary artery integrity and myocardial viability: an initial clinical validation(2018) Muñoz, Camila; Kunze, Karl P.; Neji, Radhouene; Vitadello, Teresa; Rischpler, Christoph; Botnar, René Michael; Nekolla, Stephan G.; Prieto Vásquez, ClaudiaPurpose: Cardiac PET-MR has shown potential for the comprehensive assessment of coronary heart disease. However, image degradation due to physiological motion remains a challenge that could hinder the adoption of this technology in clinical practice. The purpose of this study was to validate a recently proposed respiratory motion-corrected PET-MR framework for the simultaneous visualisation of myocardial viability (18F-FDG PET) and coronary artery anatomy (coronary MR angiography, CMRA) in patients with chronic total occlusion (CTO). Methods: A cohort of 14 patients was scanned with the proposed PET-CMRA framework. PET and CMRA images were reconstructed with and without the proposed motion correction approach for comparison purposes. Metrics of image quality including visible vessel length and sharpness were obtained for CMRA for both the right and left anterior descending coronary arteries (RCA, LAD), and relative increase in 18F-FDG PET signal after motion correction for standard 17-segment polar maps was computed. Resulting coronary anatomy by CMRA and myocardial integrity by PET were visually compared against X-ray angiography and conventional Late Gadolinium Enhancement (LGE) MRI, respectively. Results: Motion correction increased CMRA visible vessel length by 49.9% and 32.6% (RCA, LAD) and vessel sharpness by 12.3% and 18.9% (RCA, LAD) on average compared to uncorrected images. Coronary lumen delineation on motion-corrected CMRA images was in good agreement with X-ray angiography findings. For PET, motion correction resulted in an average 8% increase in 18F-FDG signal in the inferior and inferolateral segments of the myocardial wall. An improved delineation of myocardial viability defects and reduced noise in the 18F-FDG PET images was observed, improving correspondence to subendocardial LGE-MRI findings compared to uncorrected images. Conclusion: The feasibility of the PET-CMRA framework for simultaneous cardiac PET-MR imaging in a short and predictable scan time (~11 min) has been demonstrated in 14 patients with CTO. Motion correction increased visible length and sharpness of the coronary arteries by CMRA, and improved delineation of the myocardium by 18F-FDG PET, resulting in good agreement with X-ray angiography and LGE-MRI.
- ItemMRI-Guided Motion-Corrected PET Image Reconstruction for Cardiac PET/MRI(SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC, 2021) Munoz, Camila; Ellis, Sam; Nekolla, Stephan G.; Kunze, Karl P.; Vitadello, Teresa; Neji, Radhouene; Botnar, Rene M.; Schnabel, Julia A.; Reader, Andrew J.; Prieto, ClaudiaSimultaneous PET/MRI has shown potential for the comprehensive assessment of myocardial health from a single examination. Furthermore, MRI-derived respiratory motion information, when incorporated into the PET image reconstruction, has been shown to improve PET image quality. Separately, MRI-based anatomically guided PET image reconstruction has been shown to effectively denoise images, but this denoising has so far been demonstrated mainly in brain imaging. To date, the combined benefits of motion compensation and anatomic guidance have not been demonstrated for myocardial PET/MRI. This work addressed this lack by proposing a single cardiac PET/MRI image reconstruction framework that fully utilizes MRI-derived information to allow both motion compensation and anatomic guidance within the reconstruction. Methods: Fifteen patients underwent an F-18-FDG cardiac PET/MRI scan with a previously introduced acquisition framework. The MRI data processing and image reconstruction pipeline produces respiratory motion fields and a high-resolution respiratory motion-corrected MR image with good tissue contrast. This MRI-derived information was then included in a respiratory motion-corrected, cardiac-gated, anatomically guided image reconstruction of the simultaneously acquired PET data. Reconstructions were evaluated by measuring myocardial contrast and noise and were compared with images from several comparative intermediate methods using the components of the proposed framework separately. Results: Including respiratory motion correction, cardiac gating, and anatomic guidance significantly increased contrast. In particular, myocardiumto-blood pool contrast increased by 143% on average (P < 0.0001), compared with conventional uncorrected, non-guided PET images. Furthermore, anatomic guidance significantly reduced image noise, by 16.1%, compared with nonguided image reconstruction (P < 0.0001). Conclusion: The proposed framework for MRI-derived motion compensation and anatomic guidance of cardiac PET data significantly improved image quality compared with alternative reconstruction methods. Each component of the reconstruction pipeline had a positive impact on the final image quality. These improvements have the potential to improve clinical interpretability and diagnosis based on cardiac PET/MR images.
- ItemSimultaneous Highly Efficient Contrast-Free Lumen and Vessel Wall MR Imaging for Anatomical Assessment of Aortic Disease(2023) Muñoz, Camila; Fotaki, Anastasia; Hua, Alina; Hajhosseiny, Reza; Kunze, Karl P.; Ismail, Tevfik F.; Neji, Radhouene; Pushparajah, Kuberan; Botnar, René Michael; Prieto Vásquez, ClaudiaBackground: Bright-blood lumen and black-blood vessel wall imaging are required for the comprehensive assessment of aortic disease. These images are usually acquired separately, resulting in long examinations and potential misregistration between images. Purpose: To characterize the performance of an accelerated and respiratory motion-compensated three-dimensional (3D) cardiac MRI technique for simultaneous contrast-free aortic lumen and vessel wall imaging with an interleaved T2 and inversion recovery prepared sequence (iT2Prep-BOOST). Study Type: Prospective. Population: A total of 30 consecutive patients with aortopathy referred for a clinically indicated cardiac MRI examination (9 females, mean age ± standard deviation: 32 ± 12 years). Field Strength/Sequence: 1.5-T; bright-blood MR angiography (diaphragmatic navigator-gated T2-prepared 3D balanced steady-state free precession [bSSFP], T2Prep-bSSFP), breath-held black-blood two-dimensional (2D) half acquisition single-shot turbo spin echo (HASTE), and 3D bSSFP iT2Prep-BOOST. Assessment: iT2Prep-BOOST bright-blood images were compared to T2prep-bSSFP images in terms of aortic vessel dimensions, lumen-to-myocardium contrast ratio (CR), and image quality (diagnostic confidence, vessel sharpness and presence of artifacts, assessed by three cardiologists on a 4-point scale, 1: nondiagnostic to 4: excellent). The iT2Prep-BOOST black-blood images were compared to 2D HASTE images for quantification of wall thickness. A visual comparison between computed tomography (CT) and iT2Prep-BOOST was performed in a patient with chronic aortic dissection. Statistical Tests: Paired t-tests, Wilcoxon signed-rank tests, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), Bland–Altman analysis. A P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: Bright-blood iT2Prep-BOOST resulted in significantly improved image quality (mean ± standard deviation 3.8 ± 0.5 vs. 3.3 ± 0.8) and CR (2.9 ± 0.8 vs. 1.8 ± 0.5) compared with T2Prep-bSSFP, with a shorter scan time (7.8 ± 1.7 minutes vs. 12.9 ± 3.4 minutes) while providing a complementary 3D black-blood image. Aortic lumen diameter and vessel wall thickness measurements in bright-blood and black-blood images were in good agreement with T2Prep-bSSFP and HASTE images (<0.02 cm and <0.005 cm bias, respectively) and good intrareader (ICC > 0.96) and interreader (ICC > 0.94) agreement was observed for all measurements. Data Conclusion: iT2Prep-BOOST might enable time-efficient simultaneous bright- and black-blood aortic imaging, with improved image quality compared to T2Prep-bSSFP and HASTE imaging, and comparable measurements for aortic wall and lumen dimensions. Evidence Level: 2. Technical Efficacy: Stage 2.
- ItemWhole-heart non-rigid motion corrected coronary MRA with autofocus virtual 3D iNAV(ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2022) Schneider, Alina; Cruz, Gastao; Munoz, Camila; Hajhosseiny, Reza; Kuestner, Thomas; Kunze, Karl P.; Neji, Radhouene; Botnar, Rene M.; Prieto, ClaudiaPurpose: Respiratory motion-corrected coronary MR angiography (CMRA) has shown promise for assessing coronary disease. By incorporating coronal 2D image navigators (iNAVs), respiratory motion can be corrected for in a beat-to-beat basis using translational correction in the foot-head (FH) and right-left (RL) directions and in a bin-to-bin basis using non-rigid motion correction addressing the remaining FH, RL and anterior-posterior (AP) motion. However, with this approach beat-to-beat AP motion is not corrected for. In this work we investigate the effect of remaining beat-to-beat AP motion and propose a virtual 3D iNAV that exploits autofocus motion correction to enable beat-to-beat AP and improved RL intra-bin motion correction. Methods: Free-breathing 3D whole-heart CMRA was acquired using a 3-fold undersampled variable-density Cartesian trajectory. Beat-to-beat 3D translational respiratory motion was estimated from the 2D iNAVs in FH and RL directions, and in AP direction with autofocus assuming a linear relationship between FH and AP movement of the heart. Furthermore, motion in RL was also refined using autofocus. This virtual 3D (v3D) iNAV was incorporated in a non-rigid motion correction (NRMC) framework. The proposed approach was tested in 12 cardiac patients, and visible vessel length and vessel sharpness for the right (RCA) and left (LAD) coronary arteries were compared against 2D iNAV-based NRMC. Results: Average vessel sharpness and length in v3D iNAV NRMC was improved compared to 2D iNAV NRMC (vessel sharpness: RCA: 56 +/- 1% vs 52 +/- 11%, LAD: 49 +/- 8% vs 49 +/- 7%; visible vessel length: RCA: 5.98 +/- 1.37 cm vs 5.81 +/- 1.62 cm, LAD: 5.95 +/- 1.85 cm vs 4.83 +/- 1.56 cm), however these improvements were not statistically significant. Conclusion: The proposed virtual 3D iNAV NRMC reconstruction further improved NRMC CMRA image quality by reducing artefacts arising from residual AP motion, however the level of improvement was subject-dependent.