Three-dimensional black-blood multi-contrast carotid imaging using compressed sensing: a repeatability study

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Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this work is to evaluate the repeatability of a compressed sensing (CS) accelerated multi-contrast carotid protocol at 3 T. Materials and methods: Twelve volunteers and eight patients with carotid disease were scanned on a 3 T MRI scanner using a CS accelerated 3-D black-blood multi-contrast protocol which comprises T1w, T2w and PDw without CS, and with a CS factor of 1.5 and 2.0. The volunteers were scanned twice, the lumen/wall area and wall thickness were measured for each scan. Eight patients were scanned once, the inter/intra-observer reproducibility of the measurements was calculated. Results: In the repeated volunteer scans, the interclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for the wall area measurement using a CS factor of 1.5 in PDw, T1w and T2w were 0.95, 0.81, and 0.97, respectively. The ICC for lumen area measurement using a CS factor of 1.5 in PDw, T1w and T2w were 0.96, 0.92, and 0.96, respectively. In patients, the ICC for inter/intra-observer measurements of lumen/wall area, and wall thickness were all above 0.81 in all sequences. Conclusion: The results show a CS accelerated 3-D black-blood multi-contrast protocol is a robust and reproducible method for carotid imaging. Future protocol design could use CS to reduce the scanning time.

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Yuan, J., Usman, A., Reid, S. A., King, K. F., Patterson, A. J., Gillard, J. H., & Graves, M. J. (2018). Three-dimensional black-blood multi-contrast carotid imaging using compressed sensing: a repeatability study. Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics, Biology and Medicine, 31(1), 183–190. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10334-017-0640-1

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