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A multi-center inter-manufacturer study of the temporal stability of phase-contrast velocity mapping background offset errors.


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Authors

Gatehouse, Peter D 
Rolf, Marijn P 
Bloch, Karin Markenroth 
Graves, Martin J 
Kilner, Philip J 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Phase-contrast velocity images often contain a background or baseline offset error, which adds an unknown offset to the measured velocities. For accurate flow measurements, this offset must be shown negligible or corrected. Some correction techniques depend on replicating the clinical flow acquisition using a uniform stationary phantom, in order to measure the baseline offset at the region of interest and subtract it from the clinical study. Such techniques assume that the background offset is stable over the time of a patient scan, or even longer if the phantom scans are acquired later, or derived from pre-stored background correction images. There is no published evidence regarding temporal stability of the background offset. METHODS: This study assessed the temporal stability of the background offset on 3 different manufacturers' scanners over 8 weeks, using a retrospectively-gated phase-contrast cine acquisition with fixed parameters and at a fixed location, repeated 5 times in rapid succession each week. A significant offset was defined as 0.6 cm/s within 50 mm of isocenter, based upon an accuracy of 10% in a typical cardiac shunt measurement. RESULTS: Over the 5 repeated cine acquisitions, temporal drift in the baseline offset was insignificant on two machines (0.3 cm/s, 0.2 cm/s), and marginally insignificant on the third machine (0.5 cm/s) due to an apparent heating effect. Over a longer timescale of 8 weeks, insignificant drift (0.4 cm/s) occurred on one, with larger drifts (0.9 cm/s, 0.6 cm/s) on the other machines. CONCLUSIONS: During a typical patient study, background drift was insignificant. Extended high gradient power scanning with work requires care to avoid drift on some machines. Over the longer term of 8 weeks, significant drift is likely, preventing accurate correction by delayed phantom corrections or derivation from pre-stored background offset data.

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Keywords

Equipment Design, Europe, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Phantoms, Imaging, Predictive Value of Tests, Reproducibility of Results, Time Factors, Whole Body Imaging

Journal Title

J Cardiovasc Magn Reson

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1097-6647
1532-429X

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier BV