Rapid three-dimensional angiography with undersampled MR imaging

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J Comput Assist Tomogr
1987 Jan-Feb
11
1
24-30
Journal Articles
PubMed ID: 
3805424

Techniques for subtraction angiography with magnetic resonance imaging have been extended from two to three dimensions, and a novel method that reduces the expected data acquisition time by at least an order of magnitude is presented. Electrocardiogram-gated three-dimensional (3D) images are acquired by Fourier transform technique, and flow contrast is obtained by subtracting pairs of images acquired at different points in the cardiac cycle. The vascular tree is shown in 3D perspective by means of a surface detection and a 3D display program. Isotropic 3D angiography requires determining the disposition of the blood vessels in a matrix of cubical voxels. Using orthodox Fourier transform technique, for an image matrix with 256 voxels to the edge, a data acquisition with 256 X 256 = 65 K phase-encodings would be needed. If gated, this would require approximately 1 day. In this study we abbreviate the data acquisition by doing only 1/64 of the usual set of phase-encoding gradient pulses. Spatial resolution is undiminished, but aliasing or "wraparound" results in each of the two phase-encoded coordinates of the 3D image. This aliasing is rectified in a two stage process. First, 64 copies of the undersampled 3D arteriogram are juxtaposed in a two-dimensional grid pattern. This assembles many copies of the complete vascular tree. Because they occupy only a small fraction of ambient volume, these copies are unlikely to overlap or collide with one another. Second, a single copy of the vascular tree is isolated by a surface detection program that takes advantage of the fact that the vascular tree is topologically connected. Studies of the abdominal aorta are presented.

Year: 
1987