Rapid 3D-imaging of phosphocreatine recovery kinetics in the human lower leg muscles with compressed sensing

Prodromos Parasoglou, Li Feng, Ding Xia, Ricardo Otazo, Ravinder R. Regatte

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

The rate of phosphocreatine (PCr) resynthesis following physical exercise is an accepted index of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism and has been studied extensively with unlocalized 31P-MRS methods and small surface coils. Imaging experiments using volume coils that measure several muscles simultaneously can provide new insights into the variability of muscle function in healthy and diseased states. However, they are limited by long acquisition times relative to the dynamics of PCr recovery. This work focuses on the implementation of a compressed sensing technique to accelerate imaging of PCr resynthesis following physical exercise, using a modified three-dimensional turbo-spin-echo sequence and principal component analysis as sparsifying transform. The compressed sensing technique was initially validated using 2-fold retrospective undersampling of fully sampled data from four volunteers acquired on a 7T MRI system (voxel size: 1.6 mL, temporal resolution: 24 s), which led to an accurate estimation of the mono-exponential PCr resynthesis rate constant (mean error <6.4%). Acquisitions with prospective 2-fold acceleration (temporal resolution: 12 s) demonstrated that three-dimensional mapping of PCr resynthesis is possible at a temporal resolution that is sufficiently high for characterizing the recovery curve of several muscles in a single measurement.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1738-1746
Number of pages9
JournalMagnetic Resonance in Medicine
Volume68
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • compressed sensing
  • human calf muscle
  • phosphorus MRI
  • principal component analysis
  • turbo-spin-echo MRI

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