In parallel
MR imaging, a reduced data set in the
phase encoding direction(s) of
k-space is acquired to shorten
acquisition time, combining the signal of several coil arrays. The spatial information related to the
phased array coil elements is utilized for reducing the amount of conventional Fourier encoding.
First, low-resolution, fully Fourier-encoded reference images are required for sensitivity assessment. Parallel imaging
reconstruction in the Cartesian case is efficiently performed by creating one aliased image for each array element using discrete
Fourier transformation. The next step then is to create an full
FOV image from the set of intermediate images.
Parallel
reconstruction techniques can be used to improve the
image quality with increased
signal to noise ratio,
spatial resolution, reduced artifacts, and the
temporal resolution in dynamic
MRI scans.
Parallel imaging algorithms can be divided into 2 main groups:
Image
reconstruction produced by each coil (
reconstruction in the image domain, after
Fourier transform):
SENSE (
Sensitivity Encoding), PILS (Partially Parallel Imaging with Localized Sensitivity),
ASSET.
Reconstruction of the Fourier plane of images from the
frequency signals of each coil (
reconstruction in the
frequency domain, before
Fourier transform):
GRAPPA.
Additional techniques include
SMASH,
SPEEDER™,
IPAT (Integrated Parallel Acquisition Techniques - derived of GRAPPA a
k-space based technique) and mSENSE (an image based enhanced version of
SENSE).