Lung imaging under free-breathing conditions

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Abstract

Respiratory motion and pulsatile blood flow can generate artifacts in morphological and functional lung imaging. Total acquisition time, and thus the achievable signal to noise ratio, is limited when performing breath-hold and/or electrocardiogram-triggered imaging. To overcome these limitations, imaging during free respiration can be performed using respiratory gating/triggering devices or navigator echoes. However, these techniques provide only poor gating resolution and can induce saturation bands and signal fluctuations into the lung volume. In this work, acquisition schemes for nonphase encoded navigator echoes were implemented into different sequences for morphological and functional lung imaging at 1.5 Tesla (T) and 0.2T. The navigator echoes allow monitoring of respiratory motion and provide an ECG-trigger signal for correction of the heart cycle without influencing the imaged slices. Artifact free images acquired during free respiration using a 3D GE, 2D multislice TSE or multi-Gradient Echo sequence for oxygen-enhanced T2* quantification are presented. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Oechsner, M., Pracht, E. D., Staeb, D., Arnold, J. F. T., Köstler, H., Hahn, D., … Jakob, P. M. (2009). Lung imaging under free-breathing conditions. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 61(3), 723–727. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.21846

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