Abstract
PURPOSE: Myocardial microstructure has been challenging to probe in vivo. Spin echo-based diffusion-weighted sequences allow for single-shot acquisitions but are highly sensitive to cardiac motion. In this study, the use of second-order motion-compensated diffusion encoding was compared with first-order motion-compensated diffusion-weighted imaging during systolic contraction of the heart.METHODS: First- and second-order motion-compensated diffusion encoding gradients were incorporated into a triggered single-shot spin echo sequence. The effect of contractile motion on the apparent diffusion coefficients and tensor orientations was investigated in vivo from basal to apical level of the heart.RESULTS: Second-order motion compensation was found to increase the range of systolic trigger delays from 30%-55% to 15%-77% peak systole at the apex and from 25%-50% to 15%-79% peak systole at the base. Diffusion tensor analysis yielded more physiological transmural distributions when using second-order motion-compensated diffusion tensor imaging.CONCLUSION: Higher-order motion-compensated diffusion encoding decreases the sensitivity to cardiac motion, thereby enabling cardiac DTI over a wider range of time points during systolic contraction of the heart. Magn Reson Med 75:1669-1676, 2016. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Stoeck, C. T., von Deuster, C., Genet, M., Atkinson, D., & Kozerke, S. (2015). Second order motion compensated spin-echo diffusion tensor imaging of the human heart. Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 17, P81. https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429x-17-s1-p81
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