PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Acceleration of chemical shift encoding-based water fat MRI for liver proton density fat fraction and T2* mapping using compressed sensing.

  • Fabian K Lohöfer,
  • Georgios A Kaissis,
  • Christina Müller-Leisse,
  • Daniela Franz,
  • Christoph Katemann,
  • Andreas Hock,
  • Johannes M Peeters,
  • Ernst J Rummeny,
  • Dimitrios Karampinos,
  • Rickmer F Braren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224988
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11
p. e0224988

Abstract

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ObjectivesTo evaluate proton density fat fraction (PDFF) and T2* measurements of the liver with combined parallel imaging (sensitivity encoding, SENSE) and compressed sensing (CS) accelerated chemical shift encoding-based water-fat separation.MethodsSix-echo Dixon imaging was performed in the liver of 89 subjects. The first acquisition variant used acceleration based on SENSE with a total acceleration factor equal to 2.64 (acquisition labeled as SENSE). The second acquisition variant used acceleration based on a combination of CS with SENSE with a total acceleration factor equal to 4 (acquisition labeled as CS+SENSE). Acquisition times were compared between acquisitions and proton density fat fraction (PDFF) and T2*-values were measured and compared separately for each liver segment.ResultsTotal scan duration was 14.5 sec for the SENSE accelerated image acquisition and 9.3 sec for the CS+SENSE accelerated image acquisition. PDFF and T2* values did not differ significantly between the two acquisitions (paired Mann-Whitney and paired t-test P>0.05 in all cases). CS+SENSE accelerated acquisition showed reduced motion artifacts (1.1%) compared to SENSE acquisition (12.3%).ConclusionCS+SENSE accelerates liver PDFF and T2*mapping while retaining the same quantitative values as an acquisition using only SENSE and reduces motion artifacts.