Background
Myocardial T1 mapping shows promise for assessment of cardiomyopathies. Most myocardial T1 mapping techniques, such as modified Look–Locker inversion recovery (MOLLI), generate one T1 map per breath‐held acquisition (9–17 heartbeats), which prolongs multislice protocols and may be unsuitable for patients with breath‐holding difficulties.
Purpose
To develop and characterize novel shortened inversion recovery based T1 mapping schemes of 2–5 heartbeats.
Study Type
Prospective.
Population/Phantom
Numerical simulations, agarose/NiCl2 phantom, 16 healthy volunteers, and 24 patients.
Field Strength/Sequence
1.5T/MOLLI.
Assessment
All shortened T1 mapping schemes were characterized and compared with a conventional MOLLI scheme (5‐(3)‐3) in terms of accuracy, precision, spatial variability, and repeatability.
Statistical Tests
Kruskal–Wallis, Wilcoxon rank sum tests, analysis of variance, Student's t‐tests, Bland–Altman analysis, and Pearson correlation analysis.
Results
All shortened schemes provided limited T1 time variations (≤2% for T1 times ≤1200 msec) and limited penalty of precision (by a factor of ~1.4–1.5) when compared with MOLLI in numerical simulations. In phantom, differences between all schemes in terms of accuracy, spatial variability, and repeatability did not reach statistical significance (P > 0.71). In healthy volunteers, there were no statistically significant differences between all schemes in terms of native T1 times and repeatability for myocardium (P = 0.21 and P = 0.87, respectively) and blood (P = 0.79 and P = 0.41, respectively). All shortened schemes led to a limited increase of spatial variability for native myocardial T1 mapping with respect to MOLLI (by a factor of 1.2) (P < 0.0001). In both healthy volunteers and patients, the two‐heartbeat scheme and MOLLI led to highly linearly correlated T1 times (correlation coefficients ≥0.83).
Data Conclusion
The proposed two‐heartbeat T1 mapping scheme yields a 5‐fold acceleration compared with MOLLI, with highly linearly correlated T1 times, no significant difference of repeatability, and limited spatial variability penalty at 1.5T. This approach may enable myocardial T1 mapping in patients with severe breath‐holding difficulties and reduce the examination time of multislice protocols.
Level of Evidence: 1
Technical Efficacy Stage: 3
J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2019.
from #Head and Neck by Sfakianakis via simeraentaxei on Inoreader http://bit.ly/2UcZorw
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