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Reconstruction of Undersampled 3D Non-Cartesian Image-Based Navigators for Coronary MRA Using an Unrolled Deep Learning Model

2019-10-24 20:27:59
Mario O. Malavé, Corey A. Baron, Srivathsan P. Koundinyan, Christopher M. Sandino, Frank Ong, Joseph Y. Cheng, Dwight G. Nishimura

Abstract

Purpose: To rapidly reconstruct undersampled 3D non-Cartesian image-based navigators (iNAVs) using an unrolled deep learning (DL) model for non-rigid motion correction in coronary magnetic resonance angiography (CMRA). Methods: An unrolled network is trained to reconstruct beat-to-beat 3D iNAVs acquired as part of a CMRA sequence. The unrolled model incorporates a non-uniform FFT operator to perform the data consistency operation, and the regularization term is learned by a convolutional neural network (CNN) based on the proximal gradient descent algorithm. The training set includes 6,000 3D iNAVs acquired from 7 different subjects and 11 scans using a variable-density (VD) cones trajectory. For testing, 3D iNAVs from 4 additional subjects are reconstructed using the unrolled model. To validate reconstruction accuracy, global and localized motion estimates from DL model-based 3D iNAVs are compared with those extracted from 3D iNAVs reconstructed with $\textit{l}_{1}$-ESPIRiT. Then, the high-resolution coronary MRA images motion corrected with autofocusing using the $\textit{l}_{1}$-ESPIRiT and DL model-based 3D iNAVs are assessed for differences. Results: 3D iNAVs reconstructed using the DL model-based approach and conventional $\textit{l}_{1}$-ESPIRiT generate similar global and localized motion estimates and provide equivalent coronary image quality. Reconstruction with the unrolled network completes in a fraction of the time compared to CPU and GPU implementations of $\textit{l}_{1}$-ESPIRiT (20x and 3x speed increases, respectively). Conclusion: We have developed a deep neural network architecture to reconstruct undersampled 3D non-Cartesian VD cones iNAVs. Our approach decreases reconstruction time for 3D iNAVs, while preserving the accuracy of non-rigid motion information offered by them for correction.

Abstract (translated)

URL

https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.11414

PDF

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1910.11414.pdf


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