TY - JOUR
T1 - TRIO a technique for reconstruction using intensity order
T2 - Application to undersampled MRI
AU - Ramirez, Leonardo
AU - Prieto, Claudia
AU - Sing-Long, Carlos
AU - Uribe, Sergio
AU - Batchelor, Philip
AU - Tejos, Cristian
AU - Irarrazaval, Pablo
N1 - Funding Information:
Manuscript received January 14, 2011; revised March 09, 2011; accepted March 12, 2011. Date of publication March 24, 2011; date of current version August 03, 2011. This work was supported by Grant Fondecyt 1070674 and Grant ACT-079. Asterisk indicates corresponding author.
PY - 2011/8
Y1 - 2011/8
N2 - Long acquisition times are still a limitation for many applications of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), specially in 3-D and dynamic imaging. Several undersampling reconstruction techniques have been proposed to overcome this problem. These techniques are based on acquiring less samples than specified by the Nyquist criterion and estimating the nonacquired data by using some sort of prior information. Most of these reconstruction methods use prior information based on estimations of the pixel intensities of the images and therefore they are prone to introduce spatial or temporal blurring. Instead of using the pixel intensities, we propose to use information that allows us to sort the pixels of an image from darkest to brightest. The set of order relations which sort the pixels of an image has been called intensity order. The intensity order of an image can be estimated from low-resolution images, adjacent slices in volumetric acquisitions, temporal correlation in dynamic sequences or from prior reconstructions. Our technique for reconstruction using intensity order (TRIO) consists of looking for an image that satisfies the intensity order and minimizes the discrepancy between the acquired and reconstructed data. Results show that TRIO can effectively reconstruct 2-D-cine cardiac MR images (under-sampling factor of 4), estimating correctly the temporal evolution of the objects. Furthermore, TRIO is used as a second stage reconstruction after reconstructing with other techniques, keyhole, sliding window and k BLAST, to estimate the order information. In all cases the images are improved by TRIO.
AB - Long acquisition times are still a limitation for many applications of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), specially in 3-D and dynamic imaging. Several undersampling reconstruction techniques have been proposed to overcome this problem. These techniques are based on acquiring less samples than specified by the Nyquist criterion and estimating the nonacquired data by using some sort of prior information. Most of these reconstruction methods use prior information based on estimations of the pixel intensities of the images and therefore they are prone to introduce spatial or temporal blurring. Instead of using the pixel intensities, we propose to use information that allows us to sort the pixels of an image from darkest to brightest. The set of order relations which sort the pixels of an image has been called intensity order. The intensity order of an image can be estimated from low-resolution images, adjacent slices in volumetric acquisitions, temporal correlation in dynamic sequences or from prior reconstructions. Our technique for reconstruction using intensity order (TRIO) consists of looking for an image that satisfies the intensity order and minimizes the discrepancy between the acquired and reconstructed data. Results show that TRIO can effectively reconstruct 2-D-cine cardiac MR images (under-sampling factor of 4), estimating correctly the temporal evolution of the objects. Furthermore, TRIO is used as a second stage reconstruction after reconstructing with other techniques, keyhole, sliding window and k BLAST, to estimate the order information. In all cases the images are improved by TRIO.
KW - Dynamic images
KW - image reconstruction
KW - magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
KW - order information
KW - technique for reconstruction using intensity order (TRIO)
KW - undersampling
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79961191150&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TMI.2011.2132139
DO - 10.1109/TMI.2011.2132139
M3 - Article
C2 - 21435972
AN - SCOPUS:79961191150
SN - 0278-0062
VL - 30
SP - 1566
EP - 1576
JO - IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
JF - IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
IS - 8
M1 - 5739114
ER -