
View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
|
Figure 2a: Diagrams of (ac) prospectively ECG-triggered and (d) retrospectively ECG-gated cine MR pulse sequences. Ts = imaging time. (a) After the R wave, the first line of the first cardiac phase is acquired, followed in sequence by the first line of all the other cardiac phases, up to the final phase acquired. In the next cardiac cycle, the second line of all the cardiac phases is acquired, up to Np. This continues until all lines (N, phase-encoding steps) have been acquired, or for N heartbeats. In this scheme, the acquisition window is prescribed ahead of time and is generally chosen to be less than the average R-R interval so that the next R wave is not missed, should it occur earlier than anticipated. For this reason, the last 10% of diastole is usually not sampled with prospective triggering. (b) k-Space segmentation. After the R wave, first five lines (in this example) of first cardiac phase are acquired, followed in sequence by first five lines of all the other cardiac phases, up to Np. In the next cardiac cycle, next five lines of all cardiac phases are acquired, up to Np. This continues until all lines (phase-encoding steps) have been acquired, or for N/5 heartbeats. In general, if there are Ls lines per segment, it will take N/Ls heartbeats to acquire the cine study, and the duration of each cardiac phase will be Ls times the duration of the nonsegmented sequence. In this way, temporal resolution is traded against acquisition time. (c) k-Space segmentation and echo sharing. Similar to b, but central line of each segment is repeated between segments, and data are shared around this additional line. In this way, a "sliding temporal window" is generated that is five lines wide but is updated almost twice as often as in the nonecho-shared version. Therefore, almost twice as many cardiac phases are generated. (d) Similar to a, but acquisition window extends to the next R wave, sampling the entire cardiac cycle. Data are then re-sorted according to their location relative to the R-R interval.
|