Accelerated 2D radial Look-Locker T1 mapping using a deep learning-based rapid inversion recovery sampling technique

Eze Ahanonu, Ute Goerke, Kevin Johnson, Brian Toner, Diego R Martin, Vibhas Deshpande, Ali Bilgin, Maria Altbach

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Efficient abdominal coverage with T1-mapping methods currently available in the clinic is limited by the breath hold period (BHP) and the time needed for T1 recovery. This work develops a T1-mapping framework for efficient abdominal coverage based on rapid T1 recovery curve (T1RC) sampling, slice-selective inversion, optimized slice interleaving, and a convolutional neural network (CNN)-based T1 estimation. The effect of reducing the T1RC sampling was evaluated by comparing T1 estimates from T1RC ranging from 0.63 to 2.0 s with reference T1 values obtained from T1RC = 2.5–5 s. Slice interleaving methodologies were evaluated by comparing the T1 variation in abdominal organs across slices. The repeatability of the proposed framework was demonstrated by performing acquisition on test subjects across imaging sessions. Analysis of in vivo data based on retrospectively shortening the T1RC showed that with the CNN framework, a T1RC = 0.84 s yielded T1 estimates without significant changes in mean T1 (p > 0.05) or significant increase in T1 variability (p > 0.48) compared to the reference. Prospectively acquired data using T1RC = 0.84 s, an optimized slice interleaving scheme, and the CNN framework enabled 21 slices in a 20 s BHP. Analyses across abdominal organs produced T1 values within 2% of the reference. Repeatability experiments yielded Pearson's correlation, repeatability coefficient, and coefficient of variation of 0.99, 2.5%, and 0.12%, respectively. The proposed T1 mapping framework provides full abdominal coverage within a single BHP.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere5266
JournalNMR in biomedicine
Volume37
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • abdominal imaging
  • deep learning
  • Look-Locker
  • radial sampling
  • single-shot inversion recovery
  • T1 mapping

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Molecular Medicine
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging
  • Spectroscopy

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