Title :
Hemodynamic Parameter Estimation From Magnetic Resonance Perfusion Imaging With the Tikhonov Regularization Method
Author :
Ying Li ; Mingjie Gao ; Renjie He ; Yazi Ren ; Huan Liu ; Lei Guo ; Guizhi Xu
Author_Institution :
Province-Minist. Joint Key Lab. of Electromagn. Field & Electr. Apparatus Reliability, Hebei Univ. of Technol., Tianjin, China
Abstract :
In the brain, T2-weighted dynamic susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging (DSC-MRI) enables the measurements of hemodynamic parameters, such as cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral blood volume. Accurately characterizing the tissue residue function in DSC-MRI is of crucial importance to the quantification of cerebral hemodynamics. The estimation of the tissue residue function is an inverse problem, and one of the approaches is through the deconvolution. In this paper, Tikhonov regularization is used to reconstruct the residue function with smooth constraints. The influences of pertinent factors, such as signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and tracer delay on the reconstruction, are analyzed in detail. The simulation results show that the SNR and the tracer delay have little influence on the estimation of CBF. Therefore, the Tikhonov regularization method can accurately estimate the CBF with confidence.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; blood flow measurement; brain; deconvolution; image reconstruction; inverse problems; medical image processing; parameter estimation; CBF; DSC-MRI; SNR; T2-weighted dynamic susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging; Tikhonov regularization method; brain; cerebral blood flow; cerebral blood volume; cerebral hemodynamics; deconvolution; hemodynamic parameter estimation; inverse problem; magnetic resonance perfusion imaging; residue function reconstruction; signal-to-noise ratio; tissue residue function; tracer delay; Blood flow; Delays; Estimation; Magnetic resonance imaging; Mathematical model; Signal to noise ratio; CBF estimation; Cerebral blood flow (CBF) estimation; DSC-MRI; Tikhonov regularization; dynamic susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging (DSC-MRI); residue function; signal-to-noise ratio; signal-to-noise ratio (SNR);
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMAG.2015.2442617