Speaker: Ling Zhang
Title: Time-Resolved Three-Dimensional Phase-Contrast MRI
Michael Markl, PhD
?,1* Frandics P. Chan, MD, PhD
?,1
Marcus T. Alley, PhD
?,1 Kris L. Wedding, PhD
?,1
Mary T. Draney, MS,2 Chris J. Elkins, PhD
?,2
David W. Parker, MS,2 Ryan Wicker, PhD
?,
3 Charles A. Taylor, PhD
?,2 Robert J. Herfkens, MD,1 and
Norbert J. Pelc, ScD
?,1
Purpose: To demonstrate the feasibility of a
four-dimensional phase contrast (PC) technique that permits
spatial and temporal coverage of an entire three-dimensional
volume, to quantitatively validate its accuracy against an
established time resolved two-dimensional PC technique to
explore advantages of the approach with regard to the
fourdimensional nature of the data.
Materials and Methods: Time-resolved, three-dimensional
anatomical images were generated simultaneously with
registered three-directional velocity vector fields.
Improvements compared to prior methods include
retrospectively gated and respiratory compensated image
acquisition, interleaved flow encoding with freely
selectable velocity encoding (venc) along each spatial
direction, and flexible trade-off between temporal
resolution and total acquisition time.
Results: The implementation was validated against
established two-dimensional PC techniques using a
well-defined phantom, and successfully applied in volunteer
and patient examinations. Human studies were performed after
contrast administration in order to compensate for loss of
in- flow enhancement in the four-dimensional approach.
Conclusion: Advantages of the four-dimensional approach
include the complete spatial and temporal coverage of the
cardiovascular region of interest and the ability to obtain
high spatial resolution in all three dimensions with higher
signal-to-noise ratio compared to two-dimensional methods at
the same resolution. In addition, the four-dimensional
nature of the data offers a variety of image processing