CVMay 29, 2014

Deformation corrected compressed sensing (DC-CS): a novel framework for accelerated dynamic MRI

arXiv:1405.7718v284 citations
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses motion artifacts in accelerated dynamic MRI, potentially improving medical imaging for applications like cardiac cine and contrast-enhanced MRI, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing DC-CS schemes.

The authors tackled the problem of recovering dynamic MRI images from undersampled measurements by proposing a deformation corrected compressed sensing (DC-CS) framework, which demonstrated robust reconstructions with reduced motion artifacts compared to classical compressed sensing methods.

We propose a novel deformation corrected compressed sensing (DC-CS) framework to recover dynamic magnetic resonance images from undersampled measurements. We introduce a generalized formulation that is capable of handling a wide class of sparsity/compactness priors on the deformation corrected dynamic signal. In this work, we consider example compactness priors such as sparsity in temporal Fourier domain, sparsity in temporal finite difference domain, and nuclear norm penalty to exploit low rank structure. Using variable splitting, we decouple the complex optimization problem to simpler and well understood sub problems; the resulting algorithm alternates between simple steps of shrinkage based denoising, deformable registration, and a quadratic optimization step. Additionally, we employ efficient continuation strategies to minimize the risk of convergence to local minima. The proposed formulation contrasts with existing DC-CS schemes that are customized for free breathing cardiac cine applications, and other schemes that rely on fully sampled reference frames or navigator signals to estimate the deformation parameters. The efficient decoupling enabled by the proposed scheme allows its application to a wide range of applications including contrast enhanced dynamic MRI. Through experiments on numerical phantom and in vivo myocardial perfusion MRI datasets, we demonstrate the utility of the proposed DC-CS scheme in providing robust reconstructions with reduced motion artifacts over classical compressed sensing schemes that utilize the compact priors on the original deformation un-corrected signal.

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