Accurate phase unwrapping is a critical prerequisite for successful applications in phase-related MRI, including quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) and susceptibility weighted imaging. However, many existing 3D phase unwrapping algorithms face challenges in the presence of severe noise, rapidly changing phase, and open-end cutline.
In this study, we introduce a novel 3D phase unwrapping approach utilizing region partitioning and a local polynomial model. Initially, the method leverages phase partitioning to create initial regions. Noisy voxels connecting areas within these regions are excluded and grouped into residual voxels. The connected regions within the region of interest are then reidentified and categorized into blocks and residual voxels based on voxel count thresholds. Subsequently, the method sequentially performs inter-block and residual voxel phase unwrapping using the local polynomial model. The proposed method was evaluated on simulation and
Simulation experiments, conducted under different signal-to-noise ratios and phase change levels, consistently demonstrate that the proposed method achieves accurate unwrapping results, with mean error ratios not exceeding 0.01%. In contrast, the error ratios of Region-growing (N/A, 84.47%), Laplacian_based (20.65%, N/A), Graph-cut (2.26%, 20.71%), and PRELUDE (4.28%, 10.33%) methods are all substantially higher than those of the proposed method.
The proposed method demonstrates robust and accurate phase unwrapping capabilities, positioning it as a promising option for abdominal QSM applications.