IVCVDec 21, 2022

High-fidelity Direct Contrast Synthesis from Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting

arXiv:2212.10817v122 citationsh-index: 48
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses artifact reduction in MRI contrast synthesis for medical imaging applications, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackled the problem of artifacts in contrast-weighted image synthesis from Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting (MRF) data by proposing a supervised learning-based method using a conditional GAN and multi-branch U-Net, resulting in excellent image quality with mitigation of artifacts like in-flow and spiral off-resonance.

Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting (MRF) is an efficient quantitative MRI technique that can extract important tissue and system parameters such as T1, T2, B0, and B1 from a single scan. This property also makes it attractive for retrospectively synthesizing contrast-weighted images. In general, contrast-weighted images like T1-weighted, T2-weighted, etc., can be synthesized directly from parameter maps through spin-dynamics simulation (i.e., Bloch or Extended Phase Graph models). However, these approaches often exhibit artifacts due to imperfections in the mapping, the sequence modeling, and the data acquisition. Here we propose a supervised learning-based method that directly synthesizes contrast-weighted images from the MRF data without going through the quantitative mapping and spin-dynamics simulation. To implement our direct contrast synthesis (DCS) method, we deploy a conditional Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) framework and propose a multi-branch U-Net as the generator. The input MRF data are used to directly synthesize T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images through supervised training on paired MRF and target spin echo-based contrast-weighted scans. In-vivo experiments demonstrate excellent image quality compared to simulation-based contrast synthesis and previous DCS methods, both visually as well as by quantitative metrics. We also demonstrate cases where our trained model is able to mitigate in-flow and spiral off-resonance artifacts that are typically seen in MRF reconstructions and thus more faithfully represent conventional spin echo-based contrast-weighted images.

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