Publication | Closed Access
Uniqueness of poroelastic and viscoelastic nonlinear inversion MR elastography at low frequencies
30
Citations
33
References
2019
Year
EngineeringGelatin PhantomMechanical EngineeringBiomedical EngineeringMagnetic Resonance ImagingLow FrequenciesKinesiologyMechanicsBiomechanicsMotion SourceDance ImagesMechanobiologyNatural PulsationsNonlinear ElasticityMedical ImagingNeuroimagingInverse ProblemsUltrasoundBiomedical ImagingElastographyMedicine
Intrinsic actuation MR elastography (IA-MRE) exploits natural pulsations of the brain as a motion source to estimate mechanical property maps. The low frequency motion of IA-MRE introduces new considerations for inversion algorithms relative to traditional external actuation MRE. Specifically, inertial forces become very small, which leaves low frequency viscoelastic inversions with a non-unique scalar multiplier. Biphasic poroelastic inversions include additional fluid-solid interaction forces to balance the elastic forces, which avoids the non-uniqueness. Analyzing the convergence behavior from different starting values using 1 Hz simulated data, IA-MRE data from a gelatin phantom and in vivo brain IA-MRE data reveal that higher frequency (50 Hz) viscoelastic inversion reaches the correct, unique solution regardless of initial property estimate; whereas, low frequency viscoelastic inversion recovers relative values of shear modulus. In the presence of measurement noise, the non-unique scalar multiplier is determined by the softest material reaching the prescribed lower bound on shear modulus. Poroelastic inversion produces a unique solution at both 50 Hz and 1 Hz; however, hydraulic conductivity must be known or accurately estimated in order to recover quantitatively accurate shear modulus maps at low frequency.
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