Apparatus and method for mapping and measurement of spatially and temporally distributed induced small phase deviations in magnetic resonance utilizing deconvolution
09791535 · 2017-10-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R33/5608
PHYSICS
A61B5/055
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G01R33/3678
PHYSICS
G01R33/565
PHYSICS
International classification
G01R33/565
PHYSICS
A61B5/055
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G01R33/34
PHYSICS
G01R33/36
PHYSICS
G01R33/56
PHYSICS
Abstract
Phase variations of the transverse magnetization in magnetic resonance induced by superimposed physical phenomenae or by intrinsic deviations of the main magnetic B0 field are separated from Feature Space set by demodulation and deconvolution, either by electrical circuits or by equivalent computational methods, permitting mapping and measurement of these induced phase variations independent of Feature Space.
Claims
1. A system for identifying spatially and temporally distributed phase deviations within a sample under evaluation, comprising: a magnetic resonance machine including at least one quadrature coil set and a magnetic resonance machine radio frequency generator, wherein the magnetic resonance machine applies a main magnetic field to the sample under evaluation within the magnetic resonance machine; an induction component configured to induce spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations of the transverse magnetization within the sample under evaluation; a computer system connected to the magnetic resonance machine, wherein the computer system is configured to: receive a first voltage from the at least one quadrature coil set; receive a second voltage from the at least one quadrature coil set; receive an output of the magnetic resonance machine radio frequency generator and phase-shift the output to a first and second phase-shifted voltage; multiply the first voltage by the first phase-shifted voltage to generate a first result; multiply the second voltage by the second phase-shifted voltage and invert the result to generate a second result; sum the first and second results to generate a spatial Fourier transform of a Feature Space representing an original native data set of the sample under evaluation produced by the magnetic resonance machine without the induction of the spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations; apply an inverse Fourier Transform to the spatial Fourier transform of the Feature Space representing the original native data set to generate a Feature Space which is the original native data set; multiply the first voltage by the second phase-shifted voltage to generate a third result; multiply the second voltage by the first phase-shifted voltage to generate a fourth result; and sum the third and fourth results to generate a spatial Fourier transform of an Aberrational Feature Space representing the product everywhere of the original native data set and the induced spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations; apply a deconvolution algorithm to the spatial Fourier transform of the Aberrational Feature Space and the spatial Fourier transform of the Feature Space to generate a fifth result; and apply an inverse Fourier Transform to the fifth result to generate a Phase Aberration Space which is the data set of the spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the computer system is further configured to generate at least one image using the Feature Space which is the original native data set.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein the computer system is further configured to generate at least one image using the Phase Aberration Space.
4. A method of identifying spatially and temporally distributed phase deviations within a sample under evaluation by a magnetic resonance machine with at least one quadrature coil set and a magnetic resonance machine radio frequency generator, comprising: applying a main magnetic field to the sample under evaluation by the magnetic resonance machine; inducing spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations of the transverse magnetization within the sample under evaluation within the magnetic resonance machine; receiving a first voltage from the at least one quadrature coil set; receiving a second voltage from the at least one quadrature coil set; receiving an output of the magnetic resonance machine radio frequency generator and phase-shifting the output to a first and second phase-shifted voltage; multiplying the first voltage by the first phase-shifted voltage to generate a first result; multiplying the second voltage by the second phase-shifted voltage to generate a second result; summing the first and second results to generate a spatial Fourier transform of a Feature Space representing an original data set of the sample under evaluation produced by the magnetic resonance machine without the induction of the spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations; applying an inverse Fourier Transform to the spatial Fourier transform of the Feature Space representing the original native data set to generate a Feature Space which is the original native data set; multiplying the first voltage by the second phase-shifted voltage to generate a third result; multiplying the second voltage by the first phase-shifted voltage and inverting the result to generate a fourth result; and summing the third and fourth results to generate a spatial Fourier transform of an Aberrational Feature Space representing the product everywhere of the original native data set and the induced spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations; applying a deconvolution algorithm to the spatial Fourier transform of the Aberrational Feature Space and the spatial Fourier transform of the Feature Space to generate a fifth result; and applying an inverse Fourier Transform to the fifth result to generate a Phase Aberration Space which is the data set of the spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations.
5. The method of claim 4, further comprising the step of: generating at least one image using the Feature Space which is the original native data set.
6. The method of claim 4, further comprising the step of: generating at least one image using the Phase Aberration Space.
7. A system for identifying spatially and temporally distributed phase deviations within a sample under evaluation, comprising: a magnetic resonance machine including a single coil and a magnetic resonance machine radio frequency generator, wherein the magnetic resonance machine applies a main magnetic field to the sample under evaluation within the magnetic resonance machine; a phase-shift component configured to: receive a first voltage from the single coil; and produce a second voltage by applying a phase-shift to the first voltage; an induction component configured to induce spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations of the transverse magnetization within the sample under evaluation; a computer system connected to the magnetic resonance machine, wherein the computer system is configured to: receive the first voltage from the single coil; receive the second voltage from the phase-shift component; receive an output of the magnetic resonance machine radio frequency generator and phase-shift the output to a first and second phase-shifted voltage; multiply the first voltage by the first phase-shifted voltage to generate a first result; multiply the second voltage by the second phase-shifted voltage to generate a second result; sum the first and second results to generate a spatial Fourier transform of a Feature Space representing an original native data set of the sample under evaluation produced by the magnetic resonance machine without the induction of the spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations; apply an inverse Fourier Transform to the spatial Fourier transform of the Feature Space representing the original native data set to generate a Feature Space which is the original native data set; multiply the first voltage by the second phase-shifted voltage to generate a third result; multiply the second voltage by the first phase-shifted voltage and invert the result to generate a fourth result; and sum the third and fourth results to generate a spatial Fourier transform of an Aberrational Feature Space representing the product everywhere of the original native data set and the induced spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations; apply a deconvolution algorithm to the spatial Fourier transform of the Aberrational Feature Space and the spatial Fourier transform of the Feature Space to generate a fifth result; and apply an inverse Fourier Transform to the fifth result to generate a Phase Aberration Space which is the data set of the spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(8) Unless otherwise specified, “a” or “an” means “one or more.”
(9) As a general example, image formation in magnetic resonance is achieved by application of impulsive phase-encoding “magnetic gradients” and/or by application of continuous frequency-encoding “magnetic gradients” in various permutations, to a sample under evaluation, which can be generalized as
(10)
(11) Where [M] is the total transverse magnetization available to the receiver coil set, m is the transverse magnetization at each position (x, y, z) within a sample under evaluation, Kx is the temporal rate of change of the spatial frequency in radians per meter per second produced by the frequency encode gradient in the x-direction, Δκ is the spatial frequency in radians per meter produced by the phase encode gradients applied impulsively in the y and z directions, n and m are the phase encoding steps of the gradients applied impulsively in the y and z direction, ω.sub.0 is the Larmor frequency, and F is the field of view, all as is known in the art. As noted above, the transverse magnetization is the xy component of the net magnetization vector at right angles to the main magnetic field produced by a magnetic resonance device.
(12) The sample under evaluation may be any human tissue such as a human breast or a human brain, or any other material suitable for analysis by a magnetic resonance machine.
(13) Focal deviations in spatial phase φ of the transverse magnetization can be produced at each position (x, y, z) of the sample under evaluation, e.g., by focal variations in susceptibility, as produced in Functional Magnetic Brain Imaging (as explained, for example, by Stark, D D and Bradley, W G: Magnetic Resonance Imaging, (St. Louis, Mosby) Ch. 70 “Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging” (1999), which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety), variations in transverse current density as produced in Magnetic Resonance Electrical Impedance Mammography (as explained in U.S. Pat. No. 8,200,309, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety), or by focal variations in magnetic field intensity, as produced, e.g., by chemical shift, magnetization transfer, or temperature variations, all as known in prior art.
(14) These focal phase deviations produce a complex spatially distributed transverse magnetization function m′ in local Gaussian complex planes transverse everywhere to the solenoidal main magnetic field B.sub.0 whose imaginary jy axis is defined as collinear everywhere to the B.sub.1 Larmor r.f. applied magnetic field
m′=me.sup.jφ
at each position (x,y,z) within the sample under evaluation. For small deviations in phase φ, this complex spatially distributed transverse magnetization function can be approximated as
(15)
producing two components of the total transverse magnetization available to the receiver coil set, one equivalent to [M], the total transverse magnetization of the original feature space, and a second component [M′] in spatial quadrature with [M] equal to the product of the transverse magnetization m at each point of this feature space everywhere with φ, the local deviation in phase, producing an Aberrational Feature Space [M′]. The resulting total transverse spatial magnetization
(16)
produces a voltage V in a coil of the spatially distributed quadrature coil set of
(17)
in complex function notation.
(18) [M] and [M′] are orthogonal in space but not in time. P and Q are voltages representing the temporal development of the spatial Fourier transform of [M] and [M′], respectively. P and Q are orthogonal in time, but not in space. For clarity of exposition, the equivalent real function notation yields
V.sub.1=P sin ω.sub.0t+Q cos ω.sub.0t
as the voltage induced in quadrature coil A, and
V.sub.2=P cos ω.sub.0t−Q sin ω.sub.0t
as the voltage induced in quadrature coil B. Then, in matrix notation,
(19)
and by Cramer's rule
(20)
(21) Thus, both the spatial Fourier transform of Feature Space (P) and of the Aberrational Feature Space (Q) can be recovered directly, without suppressing harmonics, simultaneously and independently from one set of observations by multiplying the output voltage of each quadrature coil by sin ω.sub.0t or by cos ω.sub.0t phase-shifted voltages obtained from the magnetic resonance (MR) machine radio frequency (r.f.) generator and adding or subtracting the voltages so produced, as specified. The spatial Fourier transform of Feature Space (P) represents the original native data set output by the magnetic resonance machine after evaluation of the sample under evaluation without the induction of the spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations. The spatial Fourier transform of Aberrational Feature Space (Q) represents the data set of the product everywhere of the original native data set and the induced spatially and temporally ordered phase deviations.
(22) Preferably, the same coil set is used for excitation and reception to minimize phase drift and spatial distortion. The MR machine can be a conventional MRI device, which provides magnetic resonance images of a sample. Example MRI devices are described in the inventor's prior U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,412,322 and 5,757,187, incorporated by reference herein in their entirety. Further, images may be generated using the spatial Fourier transform of Feature Space (P) and Aberrational Feature Space (Q). The images may be generated by a computing device or the MR machine itself and may subsequently be displayed or computationally analyzed.
(23)
(24)
(25)
(26) Thus, the embodiment illustrated in
(27)
(28)
(29) The same result can be obtained from a single coil without quadrature coils using a π/2 radian phase shifting electrical filter if the phase shift produced by the filter is essentially constant over the bandwidth of the induced voltages P and Q. The voltage induced in a single receiver coil by the transverse magnetization of Larmor r.f. carrier frequency e.sup.jω.sup.
(30) The voltage induced in a single receiver coil by the transverse magnetization of Larmor r.f. carrier frequency e.sup.j(ω.sup.
(31) This yields a total output voltage of
V.sub.1=P.sub.(t) sin ω.sub.0t+Q.sub.(t) cos ω.sub.0t
(32) Passing V.sub.1 through an electrical filter shifting temporal phase by π/2 radians at the carrier Larmor r.f. frequency ω.sub.0 yields
V.sub.2=P.sub.(t) sin(ω.sub.0t+π/2)+Q.sub.(t) cos(ω.sub.0t+π2)
V.sub.2=P.sub.(t) cos ω.sub.0t−Q.sub.(t) sin ω.sub.0t
(33) Again, in matrix notation
(34)
and, by Cramer's rule
(35)
(36) Thus, multiplying V.sub.1 and V.sub.2 by sin ω.sub.0t or by cos ω.sub.0t phase-shifted voltages from the MR machine r.f. generator and adding or subtracting as specified yields P, the original Feature Space Fourier transform function and Q, the Aberrational Feature Space Fourier transform function. This can be achieved with two passive r.f. phase shifting filters, four double balanced modulators, the reference Larmor frequency from the MR machine r.f. generator, and two summing amplifiers.
(37)
(38) Based on the first and second voltage output as shown in
(39) This can be extended to a birdcage coil of multiple orthogonal sets, each set having area vectors rotated by α radians with respect to an axis orthogonal to the solenoidal B.sub.0 main magnetic field. Though not shown pictorially, the birdcage coil embodiment uses multiple MR receiver coil sets (coil A 101 and coil B 102) as shown in
V.sub.1=P sin(ω.sub.0t+α)+Q cos(ω.sub.0t+α)
=P(sin ω.sub.0t.Math.cos α+cos ω.sub.0t.Math.sin α)+Q(cos ω.sub.0t.Math.cos α−sin ω.sub.0t.Math.sin α)
V.sub.2=P sin [(ω.sub.0t+π/2)+α]+Q cos [(ω.sub.0t+π/2)+α]
=P [sin(ω.sub.0+π/2).Math.cos α+cos(ω.sub.0+π/2).Math.sin α]+Q [cos(ω.sub.0+π/2).Math.cos α−sin(ω.sub.0+π/2).Math.sin α]
sin(ω.sub.0t+π/2)=cos(ω.sub.0t); cos(ω.sub.0t+π/2)=−sin(ω.sub.0t)
V.sub.2=P(cos ω.sub.0t.Math.cos α−sin ω.sub.0t.Math.sin α)+Q(−sin ω.sub.0t.Math.cos α−cos ω.sub.0t.Math.sin α)
In matrix notation
(40)
By Cramer's rule
(41)
(42) The output Q is the Fourier transform of [M′], the Aberrational Feature Space, which is the product everywhere of the Feature Space [M], with the Phase Aberration Space [Φ]. The output P is the Fourier transform of the Feature Space [M]. Therefore, we have:
[M′]=[[M][Φ]]
and,
Q={tilde over (f)}[M′]
and,
{tilde over (f)}[M′]={tilde over (f)}[[M][Φ]]
so,
Q={tilde over (f)}[[M][Φ]]
The Fourier transform of a product is the convolution of the Fourier transform of each of the elements of the product, permitting separation by deconvolution of the measured Fourier transform of the Aberrational Feature Space into the independently measured Fourier transform of the Feature Space and into the required Fourier transform of the Phase Aberration space, as follows:
Q={tilde over (f)}[[M][Φ]]={tilde over (f)}[M]*{tilde over (f)}[Φ]
so,
Q=P*{acute over (f)}[Φ]
This allows recovery of the Phase Aberration Space [Φ] using a deconvolution and an inverse Fourier transform as follows:
{tilde over (f)}[Φ]=Q*.sup.−1P
so,
Φ={tilde over (f)}.sup.−1(Q*.sup.−1P)
This shows that, since P and Q are independently measured outputs of the system, [Φ] can be obtained by deconvolution and computing the inverse Fourier transform.
(43) In the foregoing analysis the Phase Aberration Space [Φ] is treated as distributed in space but not as varying with time. If the Phase Aberration varies rapidly in time with respect to the “read time” of the receiver of the magnetic resonance device, this will create a local Fourier shift of the Phase Aberration Space, exaggerating high spatial frequency boundaries, as would occur with focal aberrations in transverse current flux density in Magnetic Resonance Electrical Impedance Mammography (U.S. Pat. No. 8,200,309B2 to Wollin). If the local phase aberration varies slowly in time, as would occur with magnetic susceptibility variations in space in functional magnetic resonance brain imaging, this slowly varying phase aberration will disproportionately distort the low spatial frequency central components of K-space exaggerating low frequency contrast variations. Therefore, both the demarcation of boundaries of regions of phase aberration and the contrast between regions of phase aberration will be affected differently, depending on the temporal frequency of the local phase variations.
(44) As noted above, the calculations and operations of
(45) These and other input devices can be connected to processor 710 through a user input interface that is coupled to a system bus, but may be connected by other interface and bus structures, such as a parallel port, game port or a universal serial bus (USB). The system 700 may also include other peripheral output devices such as speakers, which may be connected through an output peripheral interface 794 or the like.
(46) The system and method of the present disclosure may be embodied within a non-transitory computer-readable memory that includes instructions to implement the various operations described above. The instructions on the non-transitory computer-readable memory may be specially designed for the implementation of the system and method of the present disclosure or they may be any one of a variety of types of instructions known by those skilled in the art. Examples of a non-transitory computer-readable memory include, but are not limited to CD ROM discs, DVD discs, magneto-optical media such as optical disks, read-only memory (ROM), random access memory (RAM), flash memory, and hard disk drives.
(47) The foregoing description of embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired from practice of the invention. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to explain the principals of the invention and its practical application to enable one skilled in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.