Wavelet MRE: Imaging propagating broadband acoustic waves with wavelet‐based motion‐encoding gradients

Author:

Le Yuan1ORCID,Chen Jun1,Rossman Phillip J.1,Bolster Bradley2,Kannengiesser Stephan3,Manduca Armando1ORCID,Glaser Kevin J.1,Sui Yi1ORCID,Huston John1,Yin Ziying1ORCID,Ehman Richard L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

2. MR Collaborations, Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc. Malvern Pennsylvania USA

3. MR Application Predevelopment, Siemens Healthcare GmbH Erlangen Germany

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTo demonstrate a novel MR elastography (MRE) technique, termed here wavelet MRE. With this technique, broadband motion sensitivity is achievable. Moreover, the true tissue displacement can be reconstructed with a simple inverse transform.MethodsA wavelet MRE sequence was developed with motion‐encoding gradients based on Haar wavelets. From the phase images' displacement was estimated using an inverse transform. Simulations were performed using a frequency sweep and a transient as ground‐truth motions. A PVC phantom was scanned using wavelet MRE and standard MRE with both transient (one and 10 cycles of 90‐Hz motion) and steady‐state dual‐frequency motion (30 and 60 Hz) for comparison. The technique was tested in a human brain, and motion trajectories were estimated for each voxel.ResultsIn simulation, the displacement information estimated from wavelet MRE closely matched the true motion. In the phantom test, the MRE phase data generated from the displacement information derived from wavelet MRE agreed well with standard MRE data. Testing of wavelet MRE to assess transient motion waveforms in the brain was successful, and the tissue motion observed was consistent with a previous study.ConclusionThe uniform and broadband frequency response of wavelet MRE makes it a promising method for imaging transient, multifrequency motion, or motion with unknown frequency content. One potential application is measuring the response of brain tissue undergoing low‐amplitude, transient vibrations as a model for the study of traumatic brain injury.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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