Purpose: To evaluate the accuracy of segmented k-space magnetic resonance phase velocity mapping (PVM) in quantifying aortic blood flow from through-plane velocity measurements. Materials and Methods: Two segmented PVM schemes were evaluated, one with seven lines per segment (seg-7) and one with nine lines per segment (seg-9), in twenty patients with cardiovascular disease. A non-segmented (non-seg) PVM acquisition was also performed to provide the reference data. Results: There was agreement between the aortic flow curves acquired with segmented and non-segmented PVM. The calculated systolic and total flow volume per cycle from the seg-7 and the seg-9 scans correlated and agreed with the flow volumes from the non-seg scans (differences < 5%). Sign tests showed that there were no statistically significant differences (P-values < 0.05) between the segmented and the non-segmented PVM measurements. Seg-9, which was the fastest among the three sequences, provided adequate spatial and temporal resolution (> 10 phases per cycle). Conclusion: Segmented k-space PVM shows great clinical potential in blood flow quantification. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Chatzimavroudis, G. P., Zhang, H., Halliburton, S. S., Moore, J. R., Simonetti, O. P., Schvartzman, P. R., … White, R. D. (2003). Clinical blood flow quantification with segmented k-space magnetic resonance phase velocity mapping. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 17(1), 65–71. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmri.10231
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