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Case 49 - Gibbs ringing artifact

from Section 6 - Cardiovascular MRI artifacts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2015

David Bonekamp
Affiliation:
University Hospital Heidelberg
Stefan L. Zimmerman
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins Medical Centre
Stefan L. Zimmerman
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins Medical Centre
Elliot K. Fishman
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins Medical Centre
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Summary

Imaging description

The Gibbs ringing artifact (truncation artifact) results from the limited fidelity of the superimposition of a finite number of sine and cosine functions to exactly reproduce a sharp border. In cardiac MR, it usually occurs as dark and bright periodic rings with decreasing amplitude at increased distance from the blood–myocardial border. It is the more noticeable the higher the contrast between blood and myocardium, and thus is especially prominent in first-pass perfusion studies during the early frames, where high ventricular contrast concentrations meet essentially unenhanced myocardium (Figure 49.1).

Importance

The Gibbs artifact causes oscillations around the sharp highcontrast blood/myocardial border. It results from the mathematical properties of the representation of MR images as a Fourier series, which can only approximate sharp borders. It can be made arbitrarily small at the cost of imaging time by increasing spatial resolution; however, it can never be fully avoided. The resulting image will show edges with adjacent ringing in the form of a sinc function (sin x/x). The artifact is present in both the frequency and phase directions. Mathematically, it can be shown that the positive and negative side lobes of the Fourier series have approximately 9% deviation from the baseline, thus resulting in a possible 18% deviation of signal in the subendocardium on perfusion studies if pixels are reconstructed exactly in the hills and valleys of these oscillations. This is in the range of mild perfusion defects and has important clinical consequences. These artifacts may either mask true underlying early perfusion defects or mimic such defects, leading either to decreased sensitivity for perfusion abnormalities or inappropriate diagnosis of a perfusion defect. Both Gibbs artifact and ischemia affect the subendocardial myocardium preferentially compared to the mid- or subepicardial myocardium (Figure 49.2). Thus, it can be a challenge distinguishing these from each other; and MR sequences should be optimized to minimize Gibbs artifact. By the same mechanism, Gibbs ringing can lead to simulation of a syrinx in the spinal cord or cause ringing artifact around vessels in MR angiographic examinations.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pearls and Pitfalls in Cardiovascular Imaging
Pseudolesions, Artifacts, and Other Difficult Diagnoses
, pp. 154 - 158
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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References

1. Ferreira, P., Gatehouse, P., Kellman, P., Bucciarelli-Ducci, C., Firmin, D.. Variability of myocardial perfusion dark rim Gibbs artifacts due to sub-pixel shifts. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson 2009; 11: 17.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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4. Di Bella, E. V., Parker, D. L., Sinusas, A. J.. On the dark rim artifact in dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI myocardial perfusion studies. Magn Reson Med 2005; 54: 1295–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5. Panting, J. R., Gatehouse, P. D., Yang, G. Z., et al. Abnormal subendocardial perfusion in cardiac syndrome X detected by cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. N Engl J Med 2002; 346: 1948–53.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
6. Karamitsos, T. D., Arnold, J. R., Pegg, T. J., et al. Patients with Syndrome X have normal transmural myocardial perfusion and oxygenation: a 3 tesla cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging study. Circ Cardiovasc Imaging 2012: 5: 194–200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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