DocumentCode :
2086800
Title :
Abdominal T2-Weighted Imaging by Free-Breath PACE with a 3.0T MRI System
Author :
Moroi, T. ; Mizuuchi, N. ; Maruyama, K. ; Imura, C. ; Isobe, I. ; Usagawa, T. ; Iriguchi, N.
Author_Institution :
Kumamoto Univ., Kumamoto
fYear :
2007
fDate :
23-27 May 2007
Firstpage :
740
Lastpage :
743
Abstract :
In a magnetic field of 3.0Tesla, motion artifacts are more serious, particularly in MRI of the moving upper abdomen, than those in a field of 1.5Tesla or lower. We carried out free-breathing Prospective Acquisition Correction (PACE) T2-weighted imaging of the upper abdomen in order to control the motion artifacts produced with a 3Tesla MRI System. We employed five volunteers for free-breathing T2-weighted imaging with various sequences on a whole-body 3.0-Tesla scanner. To each volunteer, Turbo SE with PACE (PACEJldquoSE), conventional Turbo SE (conv.TSE), HASTE with PACE (PACE_HASTE), and conventional HASTE (conv.HASTE) were applied. The TSE parameters were as follows: effective TE=66msec, spatial resolution in plane=1.4mm*l.lmm, slice thickness=6.0mm. The HASTE parameters were as follows: effective TE=85msec, spatial resolution in plane=1.4mm*l.lmm, slice thickness=6.0mm. Both HASTE data sets were MPR (Multi-Planar Reconstruction)-processed. Two observers evaluated image quality and the presence of artifacts. Moreover, the contrast of internal organs such as the liver and spleen were measured, and the results were compared. Motion artifacts of the moving upper abdomen were remarkably reduced with the PACE sequence, and image quality was greatly improved. In addition, to confirm the continuity of imaged body surfaces in three dimensions, both HASTE data sets (acquired as transverse slices) were reconstructed for coronal viewing. With the PACE sequence, the continuity of imaged body surfaces was dramatically improved in comparison with the conventional HASTE results. Among the four sequences, the two PACE sequences were the best in terms of both image quality and reducing respiratory motion artifacts in abdominal images.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; image reconstruction; liver; medical image processing; abdominal T2-weighted imaging; free-breath pace; magnetic flux density 3.0 T; magnetic resonance imaging; motion artifacts; multi-planar reconstruction; prospective acquisition correction; Abdomen; Control systems; Image quality; Image reconstruction; Liver; Magnetic fields; Magnetic resonance imaging; Motion control; Spatial resolution; Surface reconstruction;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Complex Medical Engineering, 2007. CME 2007. IEEE/ICME International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Beijing
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1077-4
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1078-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICCME.2007.4381836
Filename :
4381836
Link To Document :
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