Instant tissue field and magnetic susceptibility mapping from MRI raw phase using Laplacian enhanced deep neural networks

Neuroimage. 2022 Oct 1:259:119410. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119410. Epub 2022 Jun 23.

Abstract

Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) is an MRI post-processing technique that produces spatially resolved magnetic susceptibility maps from phase data. However, the traditional QSM reconstruction pipeline involves multiple non-trivial steps, including phase unwrapping, background field removal, and dipole inversion. These intermediate steps not only increase the reconstruction time but accumulates errors. This study aims to overcome existing limitations by developing a Laplacian-of-Trigonometric-functions (LoT) enhanced deep neural network for near-instant quantitative field and susceptibility mapping (i.e., iQFM and iQSM) from raw MRI phase data. The proposed iQFM and iQSM methods were compared with established reconstruction pipelines on simulated and in vivo datasets. In addition, experiments on patients with intracranial hemorrhage and multiple sclerosis were also performed to test the generalization of the proposed neural networks. The proposed iQFM and iQSM methods in healthy subjects yielded comparable results to those involving the intermediate steps while dramatically improving reconstruction accuracies on intracranial hemorrhages with large susceptibilities. High susceptibility contrast between multiple sclerosis lesions and healthy tissue was also achieved using the proposed methods. Comparative studies indicated that the most significant contributor to iQFM and iQSM over conventional multi-step methods was the elimination of traditional Laplacian unwrapping. The reconstruction time on the order of minutes for traditional approaches was shortened to around 0.1 s using the trained iQFM and iQSM neural networks.

Keywords: Deep learning QSM; Hemorrhage QSM; Instant QSM (iQSM); Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM); Single-step QSM.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms
  • Brain Mapping / methods
  • Brain* / diagnostic imaging
  • Humans
  • Image Processing, Computer-Assisted / methods
  • Intracranial Hemorrhages
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging / methods
  • Multiple Sclerosis* / diagnostic imaging
  • Neural Networks, Computer

Grants and funding