Abstract
PURPOSE: In 2D SENSE-accelerated 3D Cartesian acquisition, the net acceleration factor R is the product of the two individual accelerations, R = RY × RZ. Acceleration Apportionment tailors acceleration parameters (RY, RZ) to improve parallel imaging performance on a patient- and coil-specific basis and is demonstrated in contrast-enhanced MR angiography. METHODS: A performance metric is defined based on coil sensitivity information which identifies the (RY, RZ) pair that optimally trades off image quality with scan time reduction on a patient-specific basis. Acceleration Apportionment is evaluated using retrospective analysis of contrast-enhanced MR angiography studies, and prospective studies in which optimally apportioned parameters are compared with standard acceleration parameters. RESULTS: The retrospective studies show strong variability in optimal acceleration parameters between anatomic regions and between patients. Prospective application of apportionment to foot contrast-enhanced MR angiography with an 8-channel receiver array provides a 20% increase in net acceleration with improved contrast-to-noise ratio. Application to 16-channel contrast-enhanced MR angiography of the feet and calves suggests 10% acceleration increase to R > 13 and no contrast-to-noise ratio loss. The specific implementation allows the optimum (RY, RZ) pair to be determined within one minute. CONCLUSION: Optimum 2D SENSE acceleration parameters can be automatically chosen on a per-exam basis to allow improved performance without disrupting the clinical workflow.