Patient-independent, MHD-robust R-peak detection for retrospective gating in cardiac MRI imaging

Objective. In cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging, synchronization of image acquisition with heart motion (called gating) is performed by detecting R-peaks in electrocardiogram (ECG) signals. Effective gating is challenging with 3T and 7T scanners, due to severe distortion of ECG signals caused by magnetohydrodynamic effects associated with intense magnetic fields. This work proposes an efficient retrospective gating strategy that requires no prior training outside the scanner and investigates the optimal number of leads in the ECG acquisition set. Approach. The proposed method was developed on a data set of 12-lead ECG signals acquired within 3T and 7T scanners. Independent component analysis is employed to effectively separate components related with cardiac activity from those associated to noise. Subsequently, an automatic selection process identifies the components best suited for accurate R-peak detection, based on heart rate estimation metrics and frequency content quality indexes. Main results. The proposed method is robust to different B0 field strengths, as evidenced by R-peak detection errors of 2.4 ± 3.1 ms and 10.6 ± 15.4 ms for data acquired with 3T and 7T scanners, respectively. Its effectiveness was verified with various subject orientations, showcasing applicability in diverse clinical scenarios. The work reveals that ECG leads can be limited in number to three, or at most five for 7T f ield strengths, without significant degradation in R-peak detecti...
Source: Physiological Measurement - Category: Physiology Authors: Source Type: research