Cardiac magnetic resonance fingerprinting (cMRF) can be used to simultaneously acquire myocardial T1 and T2 maps in a single breath-hold. However, the common 250 ms acquisition window of cMRF might leave it vulnerable to motion artefacts. The goal of this study was therefore to compare the performance of cMRF with a short acquisition window (150ms) and low-rank reconstruction to that of routine cardiac parametric mapping techniques. In 7 healthy volunteers, and 62 cardiac patients, cMRF resulted in similar native relaxation times, but slightly different post-contrast T1 and ECV values compared to routine techniques.
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