Cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine MRI in the mouse: Comparison between radial and rectilinear techniques at 7T

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Abstract

ECG-gated cardiac MRI in the mouse is hindered by many technical difficulties in ECG signal recording inside high magnetic field scanners. The present study proposes a robust rectilinear method of acquiring cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine images in mouse hearts. In this approach, a motion-synchronization MR signal is collected in the center of k-space simultaneously with imaging data in each readout of a nontriggered rectilinear acquisition. This signal is then used for both cardiac and respiratory retrospective gating before cine image reconstruction. The value of this approach for overcoming ECG-gating failure was demonstrated by performing cardiac imaging in eight mice with myocardial infarction. Comparison with an auto-gated radial k-space sampling technique, previously reported for cardiac applications in the mouse, found the rectilinear strategy more robust, thanks to a more reliable self-gating signal, while the radial strategy was less sensitive to motion and flow artifacts. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Hiba, B., Richard, N., Thibault, H., & Janier, M. (2007). Cardiac and respiratory self-gated cine MRI in the mouse: Comparison between radial and rectilinear techniques at 7T. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 58(4), 745–753. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.21355

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