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211


Numerical and in vivo validation of fast cine displacement-encoded with stimulated echoes (DENSE) MRI for quantification of regional cardiac function

Feng, Li; Donnino, Robert; Babb, James; Axel, Leon; Kim, Daniel
Quantitative assessment of regional cardiac function can improve the accuracy of detecting wall motion abnormalities due to heart disease. While recently developed fast cine displacement-encoded with stimulated echoes (DENSE) MRI is a promising modality for the quantification of regional myocardial function, it has not been validated for clinical applications. The purpose of this study, therefore, was to validate the accuracy of fast cine DENSE MRI with numerical simulation and in vivo experiments. A numerical phantom was generated to model physiologically relevant deformation of the heart, and the accuracy of fast cine DENSE was evaluated against the numerical reference. For in vivo validation, 12 controls and 13 heart-disease patients were imaged using both fast cine DENSE and myocardial tagged MRI. Numerical simulation demonstrated that the echo-combination DENSE reconstruction method is relatively insensitive to clinically relevant resonance frequency offsets. The strain measurements by fast cine DENSE and the numerical reference were strongly correlated and in excellent agreement (mean difference = 0.00; 95% limits of agreement were 0.01 and -0.02). The strain measurements by fast cine DENSE and myocardial tagged MRI were strongly correlated (correlation coefficient = 0.92) and in good agreement (mean difference = 0.01; 95% limits of agreement were 0.07 and -0.04)
PMCID:2737067
PMID: 19585609
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 101933

CT and MR Appearances of Cardiac Pseudomasses: Imaging Pearls and Pitfalls (CME Credit Available) [Meeting Abstract]

Rueff, L; Srichai, M; Jacobs, J; Chandarana, H; Axel, L; Kim, D; Lim, R
ISI:000265387200308
ISSN: 0361-803x
CID: 99182

MRI of the microarchitecture of myocardial infarction: are we seeing new kinds of structures? [Editorial]

Axel, Leon
PMID: 19808588
ISSN: 1942-0080
CID: 138511

LV SURFACE RECONSTRUCTION FROM SPARSE TMRI USING LAPLACIAN SURFACE DEFORMATION AND OPTIMIZATION

Chapter by: Zhang, Shaoting; Wang, Xiaoxu; Metaxas, Dimitris; Chen, Ting; Axel, Leon
in: 2009 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON BIOMEDICAL IMAGING: FROM NANO TO MACRO, VOLS 1 AND 2 by
NEW YORK : IEEE, 2009
pp. 698-?
ISBN: 978-1-4244-3931-7
CID: 2932262

Images in cardiovascular medicine. Lyme carditis [Case Report]

Naik, Mohit; Kim, Danny; O'Brien, Francis; Axel, Leon; Srichai, Monvadi B
PMID: 18955678
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 91481

Semiautomated segmentation of myocardial contours for fast strain analysis in cine displacement-encoded MRI

Chen, Ting; Babb, James; Kellman, Peter; Axel, Leon; Kim, Daniel
The purposes of this study were to develop a semiautomated cardiac contour segmentation method for use with cine displacement-encoded MRI and evaluate its accuracy against manual segmentation. This segmentation model was designed with two distinct phases: preparation and evolution. During the model preparation phase, after manual image cropping and then image intensity standardization, the myocardium is separated from the background based on the difference in their intensity distributions, and the endo- and epi-cardial contours are initialized automatically as zeros of an underlying level set function. During the model evolution phase, the model deformation is driven by the minimization of an energy function consisting of five terms: model intensity, edge attraction, shape prior, contours interaction, and contour smoothness. The energy function is minimized iteratively by adaptively weighting the five terms in the energy function using an annealing algorithm. The validation experiments were performed on a pool of cine data sets of five volunteers. The difference between the semiautomated segmentation and manual segmentation was sufficiently small as to be considered clinically irrelevant. This relatively accurate semiautomated segmentation method can be used to significantly increase the throughput of strain analysis of cine displacement-encoded MR images for clinical applications
PMID: 18672426
ISSN: 0278-0062
CID: 80338

Myocardial first-pass perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance: history, theory, and current state of the art

Gerber, Bernhard L; Raman, Subha V; Nayak, Krishna; Epstein, Frederick H; Ferreira, Pedro; Axel, Leon; Kraitchman, Dara L
In less than two decades, first-pass perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) has undergone a wide range of changes with the development and availability of improved hardware, software, and contrast agents, in concert with a better understanding of the mechanisms of contrast enhancement. The following review provides a perspective of the historical development of first-pass CMR, the developments in pulse sequence design and contrast agents, the relevant animal models used in early preclinical studies, the mechanism of artifacts, the differences between 1.5T and 3T scanning, and the relevant clinical applications and protocols. This comprehensive overview includes a summary of the past clinical performance of first-pass perfusion CMR and current clinical applications using state-of-the-art methodologies
PMCID:2387155
PMID: 18442372
ISSN: 1532-429x
CID: 93972

3D cardiac motion tracking using Robust Point Matching and meshless deformable models

Chapter by: Chen, Ting; Wang, Xiaoxu; Metaxas, Dimitris; Axel, Leon
in: 2008 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON BIOMEDICAL IMAGING: FROM NANO TO MACRO, VOLS 1-4 by
NEW YORK : IEEE, 2008
pp. 280-?
ISBN: 978-1-4244-2002-5
CID: 2932202

Meshless deformable models for LV motion analysis

Chapter by: Wang, Xiaoxu; Metaxas, Dimitis; Chen, Ting; Axel, Leon
in: 2008 IEEE CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER VISION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION, VOLS 1-12 by
NEW YORK : IEEE, 2008
pp. 1736-?
ISBN: 978-1-4244-2242-5
CID: 2932212

Comparison of the effectiveness of saturation pulses in the heart at 3T

Kim, Daniel; Gonen, Oded; Oesingmann, Niels; Axel, Leon
Cardiac MRI at 3T provides a means to increase the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) for first-pass perfusion MRI. However, both the static magnetic field (B(0)) and radio frequency (RF) field (B(1)) variations within the heart are comparatively higher at 3T than at 1.5T. The increased field variations can degrade the performance of a single rectangular saturation pulse that is conventionally used for magnetization preparation. The accuracy of T(1)-weighted signal measurement depends on the uniformity of the magnetization saturation. The purpose of this study was to assess the relative effectiveness of the rectangular, pulse train, and adiabatic composite (BIR-4) saturation pulses in the human heart at 3T. In volunteers, after nominal saturation, the mean residual magnetization within the left ventricle (LV) was different between all three pulses (0.13 +/- 0.06 vs. 0.03 +/- 0.02 vs. 0.03 +/- 0.01, respectively; P < 0.001). Within paired groups, the mean residual magnetization was significantly higher for the rectangular pulse than for either the pulse train and BIR-4 pulses (P < 0.001), but not different between the pulse train and BIR-4 pulses. The performances of all three saturation pulses were comparatively poorer in the right ventricle (RV) than in the LV, respectively. Magn Reson Med, 2007. (c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc
PMID: 18050347
ISSN: 0740-3194
CID: 75184