Paradoxical effect of the signal-to-noise ratio of GRAPPA calibration lines: A quantitative study

Magn Reson Med. 2015 Jul;74(1):231-239. doi: 10.1002/mrm.25385. Epub 2014 Jul 30.

Abstract

Purpose: Intuitively, GRAPPA auto-calibration signal (ACS) lines with higher signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) may be expected to boost the accuracy of kernel estimation and increase the SNR of GRAPPA reconstructed images. Paradoxically, Sodickson and his colleagues pointed out that using ACS lines with high SNR may actually lead to lower SNR in the GRAPPA reconstructed images. A quantitative study of how the noise in the ACS lines affects the SNR of the GRAPPA reconstructed images is presented.

Methods: In a phantom, the singular values of the GRAPPA encoding matrix and the root-mean-square error of GRAPPA reconstruction were evaluated using multiple sets of ACS lines with variant SNR. In volunteers, ACS lines with high and low SNR were estimated, and the SNR of corresponding TGRAPPA reconstructed images was evaluated.

Results: We show that the condition number of the GRAPPA kernel estimation equations is proportional to the SNR of the ACS lines. In dynamic image series reconstructed with TGRAPPA, high SNR ACS lines result in reduced SNR if appropriate regularization is not applied.

Conclusion: Noise has a similar effect to Tikhonov regularization. Without appropriate regularization, a GRAPPA kernel estimated from ACS lines with higher SNR amplifies random noise in the GRAPPA reconstruction. Magn Reson Med 74:231-239, 2015. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Keywords: GRAPPA; condition number; real-time MRI; signal to noise ratio.