TY - JOUR
T1 - Keyhole and zero-padding approaches for reduced-encoding diffusion tensor imaging of the mouse brains
AU - Sun, Shu Wei
AU - Chen, Yu Jen
AU - Chou, Kun Hsien
AU - Chu, Woei Chyn
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported in part by research grants from the Ministry of Education in Taiwan (Aim for the Top University Plan), the National Science Council of Taiwan (Grant No: NSC 97-2320-B-010-003-MY3 and NSC 97-3114-E-010-002 ) and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society of America (Grant No: RG-3864 ).
PY - 2010/12
Y1 - 2010/12
N2 - Keyhole diffusion tensor imaging (keyhole DTI) was previously proposed in cardiac imaging to reconstruct DTI maps from the reduced phase-encoding images. To evaluate the feasibility of keyhole DTI in brain imaging, keyhole and zero-padding DTI algorithms were employed on in vivo mouse brain. The reduced phase-encoding portion, also termed as the sharing rate, was varied from 50% to 90% of the full k-space. Our data showed that zero-padding DTI resulted in decreased fractional anisotropy (FA) and decreased mean apparent diffusion coefficient (mean ADC) in white matter (WM) regions. Keyhole DTI showed a better edge preservation on mean ADC maps but not on FA maps as compared to the zero-padding DTI. When increasing the sharing rate in keyhole approach, an underestimation of FA and an over- or underestimation of mean ADC were measured in WM depending on the selected reference image. The inconsistency of keyhole DTI may add a challenge for the wide use of this modality. However, with a carefully selected directive diffusion-weighted image to serve as the reference image in the keyhole approach, this study demonstrated that one may obtain DTI indices of reduced-encoding images with high consistency to those derived with full k-space DTI.
AB - Keyhole diffusion tensor imaging (keyhole DTI) was previously proposed in cardiac imaging to reconstruct DTI maps from the reduced phase-encoding images. To evaluate the feasibility of keyhole DTI in brain imaging, keyhole and zero-padding DTI algorithms were employed on in vivo mouse brain. The reduced phase-encoding portion, also termed as the sharing rate, was varied from 50% to 90% of the full k-space. Our data showed that zero-padding DTI resulted in decreased fractional anisotropy (FA) and decreased mean apparent diffusion coefficient (mean ADC) in white matter (WM) regions. Keyhole DTI showed a better edge preservation on mean ADC maps but not on FA maps as compared to the zero-padding DTI. When increasing the sharing rate in keyhole approach, an underestimation of FA and an over- or underestimation of mean ADC were measured in WM depending on the selected reference image. The inconsistency of keyhole DTI may add a challenge for the wide use of this modality. However, with a carefully selected directive diffusion-weighted image to serve as the reference image in the keyhole approach, this study demonstrated that one may obtain DTI indices of reduced-encoding images with high consistency to those derived with full k-space DTI.
KW - DTI
KW - Diffusion tensor imaging
KW - Keyhole
KW - Magnetic resonance keyhole imaging
KW - Reduced encoding
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U2 - 10.1016/j.mri.2010.07.016
DO - 10.1016/j.mri.2010.07.016
M3 - Article
C2 - 20850238
SN - 0730-725X
VL - 28
SP - 1413
EP - 1419
JO - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
JF - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
IS - 10
ER -