Patent classifications
G01R33/56509
Magnetic resonance apparatus and method for operating a magnetic resonance apparatus, computer program and electronically readable data storage medium
A magnetic resonance apparatus, for acquiring magnetic resonance data from a person who is asleep, includes a person support apparatus to provide a sleeping place; an acquisition arrangement including a radiofrequency coil arrangement for transmitting excitation pulses and for receiving magnetic resonance signals; and a controller, designed to operate the acquisition arrangement according to a magnetic resonance sequence for acquiring a magnetic resonance dataset from a region under examination of the person. The magnetic resonance apparatus includes a main magnetic field of strength less than 20 mT, in particular less than 10 mT, and the controller includes an acquisition unit for acquiring a magnetic resonance dataset via a prolonged magnetic resonance sequence having a total acquisition duration of more than one hour.
Motion correction systems and methods of propeller magnetic resonance images
A magnetic resonance (MR) imaging method of correcting motion in precorrection MR images of a subject is provided. The method includes applying, by an MR system, a pulse sequence having a k-space trajectory of a blade being rotated in k-space. The method also includes acquiring k-space data of a three-dimensional (3D) imaging volume of the subject, the k-space data of the 3D imaging volume corresponding to the precorrection MR images and acquired by the pulse sequence. The method further includes receiving a 3D MR calibration data of a 3D calibration volume, wherein the 3D calibration volume is greater than or equal to the 3D imaging volume, jointly estimating rotation and translation in the precorrection MR images based on the k-space data of the 3D imaging volume and the calibration data, correcting motion in the precorrection images based on the estimated rotation and the estimated translation, and outputting the motion-corrected images.
Magnetic resonance imaging apparatus
In one embodiment, a magnetic resonance imaging apparatus includes: a scanner that includes a static magnetic field magnet configured to generate a static magnetic field, a gradient coil configured to generate a gradient magnetic field, and a WB (Whole Body) coil configured to apply an RF pulse to an object; and processing circuitry. The processing circuitry is configured to: set (i) a pulse sequence in which a sequence element is repeated, the sequence element including at least an inversion pulse and (ii) a data acquisition sequence executed after a delay time from the inversion pulse; and cause the scanner to execute the pulse sequence by using virtual gating.
REAL TIME MONITORING AND PREDICTION OF MOTION IN MRI
Methods, computer-readable storage devices, and systems are described for reducing movement of a patient undergoing a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan by aligning MRI data, the method implemented on a Framewise Integrated Real-time MRI Monitoring (“FIRMM”) computing device including at least one processor in communication with at least one memory device. Aspects of the method comprise receiving a data frame from the MRI system, aligning the received data frame to a preceding data frame, calculating motion of a body part between the received data frame and the preceding data frame, calculating total frame displacement, and excluding data frames with a cutoff above a pre-identified threshold of the total frame displacement.
METHOD FOR ACQUIRING A THREE-DIMENSIONAL MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE DATASET AND FOR GENERATING A MOTION-CORRECTED IMAGE DATASET
A three-dimensional magnetic resonance image dataset of an object is acquired using a multi-shot imaging protocol in which several k-space lines are acquired in one shot. The three-dimensional k-space includes a central region and a periphery, wherein the sampling order of k-space lines differs between the central region and the periphery. At least one k-space line from each shot passes through the central region, whereas the periphery includes regions, which are sampled by k-space lines from a subset of the plurality of shots.
System and method for controlling physiological noise in functional magnetic resonance imaging
A system and method is provided for controlling physiological-noise in functional magnetic resonance imaging using raw k-space data to extract physiological noise effects. The method can identify these effects when they are separable and directly reflects the artefactual effects on fMRI data, without the need for external monitoring or recording devices and to be compensated for via rigorous statistical analysis modeling of such noise sources. The physiological fluctuations may be treated as global perturbations presented around the origin point in a k-space 2D slice. Each k-space 2D slice may be acquired at a very short repetition time with an effective sampling rate to sample cardiac and respiratory rhythms through proper reordering and phase-unwarping techniques applied to the raw k-space data.
Coil mixing error matrix and deep learning for prospective motion assessment
Systems and Methods that identify the effect of motion during a medical imaging procedure. A neural network is trained to translate motion induced deviations of a coil-mixing matrix relative to a reference acquisition into a motion score. This score can be used for the prospective detection of the most corrupted echo trains for removal or triggering a replacement by reacquisition.
METHOD FOR RECONSTRUCTING A MOTION-CORRECTED MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE OF A SUBJECT
A method for reconstructing a motion-corrected magnetic resonance image of a subject includes providing k-space magnetic resonance data including a plurality of shots, wherein each shot corresponds to an individual motion state of the subject. The method further includes providing motion parameters related to each motion state, determining redundancies across the motion states of the plurality of shots based on the motion parameters, compressing the plurality of motion states based on the determined redundancies across the motion states, and reconstructing the magnetic resonance image from the k-space magnetic resonance data based on the compressed plurality of motion states.
MR Imaging Method and Apparatus and Computer-Readable Storage Medium
An MR imaging method and apparatus and a computer-readable storage medium. The method includes: collecting MR signal data every set time interval according to a stack-of-stars scheme or stack-of-spirals scheme, where in each time interval, MR signal data of each of a plurality of parallel slices arranged along a slice direction is collected as a k-space slice, and the k-space slices of the plurality of parallel slices are stacked into a k-space column along the slice direction; in a process of collecting the MR signal data, performing motion detection by utilizing a pilot tone signal, and marking MR signal data collected during a body motion as motion damage data when the body motion is detected; and performing motion correction on MR signal data after the motion damage data for k-space columns successively collected in a plurality of time intervals, and obtaining a current MR image based on MR signal data obtained after the motion correction and MR signal data before the motion damage data.
Systems and methods for estimating magnetic susceptibility through continuous motion in an MRI scanner
Systems and methods for estimating magnetic susceptibility of a patient through continuous motion in an MRI scanner are provided herein. In one or more examples, during the collection of data, the patient can be instructed to move their head or other part of the body in a continuous manner and for a fixed duration of time. During the fixed duration of time, magnitude a data from the RF signal can be received by one or more RF coils can be collected. The received and undersampled magnitude data can be converted to phase data which can then be converted to magnetic susceptibility. Thus magnetic susceptibility can be determined while allowing for continuous motion during the MRI scan, which can be more comfortable and feasible for the patient in contrast to techniques that require the patient to hold their body at a particular orientation in the scanner for a fixed duration of time.