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Related Concept Videos

NMR Spectrometers: Resolution and Error Correction01:14

NMR Spectrometers: Resolution and Error Correction

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When magnetic nuclei in a sample achieve resonance and undergo relaxation, the signal detected in NMR is an approximately exponential free induction decay. Fourier transform of an exponential decay yields a Lorentzian peak in the frequency domain. Lorentzian peaks in an NMR spectrum are defined by their amplitude, full width at half maximum, and position, where the peak width is governed by the spin-spin relaxation time alone. In real experiments, however, the applied magnetic field is rendered...
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging01:24

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Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a noninvasive medical imaging technique based on a phenomenon of nuclear physics discovered in the 1930s, in which matter exposed to magnetic fields and radio waves was found to emit radio signals. In 1970, a physician and researcher named Raymond Damadian noticed that malignant (cancerous) tissue gave off different signals than normal body tissue. He applied for a patent for the first MRI scanning device in clinical use by the early 1980s. The early MRI...
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Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Skeletal Muscle Disease
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Deep learning-assisted model-based off-resonance correction for non-Cartesian SWI.

Guillaume Daval-Frérot1,2,3, Aurélien Massire1, Boris Mailhé4

  • 1Siemens Healthineers, Saint-Denis, France.

Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
|June 22, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A novel hybrid approach combining model-based and deep learning methods significantly accelerates off-resonance correction for accelerated MRI scans. This innovation speeds up image reconstruction, making advanced techniques more viable for clinical use.

Keywords:
3D SPARKLINGdeep learningnon-Cartesian imagingoff-resonance correctionunrolled neural network

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Area of Science:

  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
  • Medical Image Reconstruction
  • Deep Learning in Medical Imaging

Background:

  • Patient-induced magnetic field inhomogeneities cause artifacts (off-resonance) in MRI, particularly in long readout sequences like SWI.
  • Conventional correction methods are too slow for high-resolution, accelerated 3D non-Cartesian multi-coil acquisitions in clinical settings.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop and evaluate a hybrid pipeline combining model-based and neural network approaches for accelerated off-resonance correction in MRI.
  • To reduce the computational time of off-resonance correction in demanding MRI acquisitions.

Main Methods:

  • Hybrid pipelines using UNets were trained on accelerated 3D SWI SPARKLING acquisitions.
  • Off-resonance correction was performed using a combination of model-based methods and deep learning.
  • Performance was compared against model-only and network-only pipelines using slow, model-based corrections as ground truth.

Main Results:

  • The proposed hybrid pipelines achieved reconstruction speeds two to three times faster than baseline methods.
  • Neural networks acted as a pre-conditioner and provided inter-iteration memory, enhancing model design flexibility.
  • Synergies between acceleration factors and model/network components were observed.

Conclusions:

  • A combination of model-based and network-based off-resonance correction effectively accelerates conventional methods.
  • The hybrid approach shows promise for clinical application by significantly reducing reconstruction times.
  • Further exploration of model/network synergies could lead to future advancements in accelerated MRI.