On-line 3D motion estimation using low resolution MRI

Publication date

2015-08-21

Authors

Glitzner, M
de Senneville, B. Denis
Lagendijk, J J WISNI 0000000393637862
Raaymakers, Bas WORCID 0000-0002-8036-6808ISNI 0000000392005337
Crijns, S P MISNI 0000000396863953

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Document Type

Article

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taverne

Abstract

Image processing such as deformable image registration finds its way into radiotherapy as a means to track non-rigid anatomy. With the advent of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) guided radiotherapy, intrafraction anatomy snapshots become technically feasible. MRI provides the needed tissue signal for high-fidelity image registration. However, acquisitions, especially in 3D, take a considerable amount of time. Pushing towards real-time adaptive radiotherapy, MRI needs to be accelerated without degrading the quality of information. In this paper, we investigate the impact of image resolution on the quality of motion estimations. Potentially, spatially undersampled images yield comparable motion estimations. At the same time, their acquisition times would reduce greatly due to the sparser sampling. In order to substantiate this hypothesis, exemplary 4D datasets of the abdomen were downsampled gradually. Subsequently, spatiotemporal deformations are extracted consistently using the same motion estimation for each downsampled dataset. Errors between the original and the respectively downsampled version of the dataset are then evaluated. Compared to ground-truth, results show high similarity of deformations estimated from downsampled image data. Using a dataset with (2.5 mm)3 voxel size, deformation fields could be recovered well up to a downsampling factor of 2, i.e. (5 mm)3. In a therapy guidance scenario MRI, imaging speed could accordingly increase approximately fourfold, with acceptable loss of estimated motion quality.

Keywords

data sufficiency, deformable image registration, local deformations, resampling, Taverne

Citation

Glitzner, M, de Senneville, B D, Lagendijk, J J W, Raaymakers, B W & Crijns, S P M 2015, 'On-line 3D motion estimation using low resolution MRI', Physics in Medicine and Biology, vol. 60, no. 16, pp. N301-N310. https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/60/16/N301