Meeting Banner
Abstract #1011

Robust Multi-Shot Diffusion Weighted Imaging of the Abdomen with Region-Based Shot Rejection

Philip Kenneth Lee1, Xuetong Zhou1,2, and Brian Andrew Hargreaves1,2,3
1Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States, 2Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States, 3Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States

Synopsis

Keywords: Diffusion Reconstruction, Diffusion/other diffusion imaging techniques

Motivation: To improve the motion robustness of multi-shot DWI in the abdomen and reduce signal dropouts and ADC overestimation caused by unresolved shot-to-shot phase.

Goal(s): Demonstrate that region-based weighting of different shots improves diffusion contrast in rapidly moving abdominal organs.

Approach: Shot rejection was evaluated in the pancreas. Multiple shot rejection formulations were tested, and compared using conventional monopolar, and motion-compensated diffusion encodings.

Results: Shot rejection allows conventional monopolar encoding to achieve diffusion weighting and ADCs similar to the motion-compensated encoding in the pancreas. The reconstruction is linear, requires no modifications to the sequence, and is applicable to many encoding trajectories.

Impact: Shot rejection may improve the consistency and robustness of multi-shot abdominal DWI in the clinic, as well as its ability to differentiate pathologies. This will improve repeatability of DWI studies of rapidly moving organs, such as the pancreas and heart.

How to access this content:

For one year after publication, abstracts and videos are only open to registrants of this annual meeting. Registrants should use their existing login information. Non-registrant access can be purchased via the ISMRM E-Library.

After one year, current ISMRM & ISMRT members get free access to both the abstracts and videos. Non-members and non-registrants must purchase access via the ISMRM E-Library.

After two years, the meeting proceedings (abstracts) are opened to the public and require no login information. Videos remain behind password for access by members, registrants and E-Library customers.

Click here for more information on becoming a member.

Keywords