Reliable phase-contrast flow volume magnetic resonance measurements are feasible without adjustment of the velocity encoding parameter
Journal article, 2020

Purpose: To show that adjustment of velocity encoding (VENC) for phase-contrast (PC) flow volume measurements is not necessary in modern MR scanners with effective background velocity offset corrections. Approach: The independence on VENC was demonstrated theoretically, but also experimentally on dedicated phantoms and on patients with chronic aortic regurgitation (n = 17) and one healthy volunteer. All PC measurements were performed using a modern MR scanner, where the pre-emphasis circuit but also a subsequent post-processing filter were used for effective correction of background velocity offset errors. Results: The VENC level strongly affected the velocity noise level in the PC images and, hence, the estimated peak flow velocity. However, neither the regurgitant blood flow volume nor the mean flow velocity displayed any clinically relevant dependency on the VENC level. Also, the background velocity offset was shown to be close to zero (<0.6 cm/s) for a VENC range of 150 to 500 cm/s, adding no significant errors to the PC flow volume measurement. Conclusions: Our study shows that reliable PC flow volume measurements are feasible without adjustment of the VENC parameter. Without the need for VENC adjustments, the scan time can be reduced for the benefit of the patient. (C) 2020 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE).

velocity encoding

phase contrast

background velocity offset

velocity-to-noise-ratio

magnetic resonance imaging

Author

Kerstin M. Lagerstrand

University of Gothenburg

Frida Svensson

University of Gothenburg

Christian L. Polte

University of Gothenburg

Odd Bech-Hanssen

University of Gothenburg

Goran Starck

University of Gothenburg

Artur Chodorowski

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

Ase A. Johnsson

University of Gothenburg

Journal of Medical Imaging

23294302 (ISSN) 23294310 (eISSN)

Vol. 7 6 063502

Subject Categories

Medical Laboratory and Measurements Technologies

Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics

Medical Image Processing

DOI

10.1117/1.JMI.7.6.063502

PubMed

33313339

More information

Latest update

4/21/2023