GRASPNET: Fast spatiotemporal deep learning reconstruction of golden-angle radial data for free-breathing dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The purpose of the current study was to develop a deep learning technique called Golden-angle RAdial Sparse Parallel Network (GRASPnet) for fast reconstruction of dynamic contrast-enhanced 4D MRI acquired with golden-angle radial k-space trajectories. GRASPnet operates in the image-time space and does not use explicit data consistency to minimize the reconstruction time. Three different network architectures were developed: (1) GRASPnet-2D: 2D convolutional kernels (x,y) and coil and contrast dimensions collapsed into a single combined dimension; (2) GRASPnet-3D: 3D kernels (x,y,t); and (3) GRASPnet-2D + time: two 3D kernels to first exploit spatial correlations (x,y,1) followed by temporal correlations (1,1,t). The networks were trained using iterative GRASP reconstruction as the reference. Free-breathing 3D abdominal imaging with contrast injection was performed on 33 patients with liver lesions using a T1-weighted golden-angle stack-of-stars pulse sequence. Ten datasets were used for testing. The three GRASPnet architectures were compared with iterative GRASP results using quantitative and qualitative analysis, including impressions from two body radiologists. The three GRASPnet techniques reduced the reconstruction time to about 13 s with similar results with respect to iterative GRASP. Among the GRASPnet techniques, GRASPnet-2D + time compared favorably in the quantitative analysis. Spatiotemporal deep learning enables reconstruction of dynamic 4D contrast-enhanced images in a few seconds, which would facilitate translation to clinical practice of compressed sensing methods that are currently limited by long reconstruction times.

publication date

  • November 25, 2022

Research

keywords

  • Deep Learning

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC9898111

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85142737341

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1002/nbm.4861

PubMed ID

  • 36305619

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 36

issue

  • 3