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Influence of motion correction on the visual analysis of cardiac magnetic resonance stress perfusion imaging
Authors:von Knobelsdorff-Brenkenhoff  Florian  Reiter  Stephanie  Menini  Anne  Janich  Martin A  Schunke  Tobias  Ziegler  Karl  Scheck  Roland  Höfling  Berthold  Pilz  Günter
Affiliation:1.Department of Cardiology, Academic Teaching Hospital Agatharied of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Agatharied, Germany
;2.GE Healthcare, Applied Science Lab, Menlo Park, CA, USA
;3.GE Healthcare, Munich, Germany
;4.Department of Radiology, Academic Teaching Hospital Agatharied of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Agatharied, Germany
;
Abstract:Objective

Image post-processing corrects for cardiac and respiratory motion (MoCo) during cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) stress perfusion. The study analyzed its influence on visual image evaluation.

Materials and methods

Sixty-two patients with (suspected) coronary artery disease underwent a standard CMR stress perfusion exam during free-breathing. Image post-processing was performed without (non-MoCo) and with MoCo (image intensity normalization; motion extraction with iterative non-rigid registration; motion warping with the combined displacement field). Images were evaluated regarding the perfusion pattern (perfusion deficit, dark rim artifact, uncertain signal loss, and normal perfusion), the general image quality (non-diagnostic, imperfect, good, and excellent), and the reader’s subjective confidence to assess the images (not confident, confident, very confident).

Results

Fifty-three (non-MoCo) and 52 (MoCo) myocardial segments were rated as ‘perfusion deficit’, 113 vs. 109 as ‘dark rim artifacts’, 9 vs. 7 as ‘uncertain signal loss’, and 817 vs. 824 as ‘normal’. Agreement between non-MoCo and MoCo was high with no diagnostic difference per-patient. The image quality of MoCo was rated more often as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’ (92 vs. 63%), and the diagnostic confidence more often as “very confident” (71 vs. 45%) compared to non-MoCo.

Conclusions

The comparison of perfusion images acquired during free-breathing and post-processed with and without motion correction demonstrated that both methods led to a consistent evaluation of the perfusion pattern, while the image quality and the reader’s subjective confidence to assess the images were rated more favorably for MoCo.

Keywords:
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