| Literature DB >> 28611728 |
Inger Havsteen1, Anders Ohlhues2, Kristoffer H Madsen3, Janus Damm Nybing1, Hanne Christensen4, Anders Christensen1.
Abstract
Movement artifacts compromise image quality and may interfere with interpretation, especially in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) applications with low signal-to-noise ratio such as functional MRI or diffusion tensor imaging, and when imaging small lesions. High image resolution has high sensitivity to motion artifacts and often prolongs scan time that again aggravates movement artifacts. During the scan fast imaging techniques and sequences, optimal receiver coils, careful patient positioning, and instruction may minimize movement artifacts. Physiological noise sources are motion from respiration, flow and pulse coupled to cardiac cycles, from the swallowing reflex and small spontaneous head movements. Par example, in resting-state functional MRI spontaneous neuronal activity adds 1-2% of signal change, even under optimal conditions signal contributions from physiological noise remain a considerable fraction hereof. Movement tracking during imaging may allow for prospective correction or postprocessing steps separating signal and noise.Entities:
Keywords: acute stroke imaging; dynamic magnetic resonance imaging; motion artifacts; motion tracking; noise reduction
Year: 2017 PMID: 28611728 PMCID: PMC5447676 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Coronal reconstruction of echo planar images (EPI) in volume without motion (volume 60, left) and volume with motion artifacts (volume 305, right). The striped appearance of volume 305 arises from the interleaved EPI sequence used. Two movement measures are shown: (A) Euclidian translational displacement in millimeter and (B) DVARS (percent mean signal change) as defined in Ref. (5). In this study of children, with liberal chosen movement thresholds, we discarded volumes exceeding threshold and marked in red.
Figure 2(A) Three and (B) 20-gradient direction diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) images of 68 years female with 2 h lasting transient ischemic attack symptoms including right hand paresis and slurred speech. In (B), note the occipital ring artifact, blurred contours of the right-sided cortical diffusion lesion and blurred cortex outline due to motion. Three-gradient direction DWI had acquisition time 2 min and 7 s and 20-gradient direction DWI had 4 min and 39 s, both were standard vendor protocols.
Spatial resolution.
| B (T) | Resolution (mm3) |
|---|---|
| 3 T anatomical images | 1 × 1 × 1 |
| 3 T functional MRI (fMRI) and perfusion contrast | 2 × 2 × 2 |
| 7 T anatomical images | 0.5 × 0.5 × 0.5 |
| 7 T fMRI | 1 × 1 × 1 |
From Ref. (.
.
Contributions to rs-fMRI signal change in whole brain gray matter at voxel level in 7 T.
| Low frequency drift due to scanner instability | 3.2% |
| Thermal noise | 2.3% |
| Spontaneous neuronal activity | 1.9% |
| RETROICOR | 0.1% |
| Cardiac rate | 0.1% |
| Respiration volume per unit time | 0.1% |
From Ref. (.
.
Displacement sizes.
| Respiratory motion of the diaphragm | Several cm |
| Respiratory motion of the chest wall | Several mm |
| Cardiac motion | >1 cm ( |
| Head motion | 1 mm ( |
| Brain pulsation | 0.1 mm ( |
Common sources of motion artifacts and practical tips.
| Motion source | Mitigation strategy |
|---|---|
| Situational subject motion | Protocol design matches population (e.g., shorter protocols in acute settings) |
| Patient preparation including management of pain, claustrophobia, or other discomfort | |
| Information, scanner familiarization | |
| Comfortable positioning and optimal head support by padding | |
| Reminders | |
| Structural magnetic resonance imaging: sedation, if clinically indicated | |
| Functional MRI: task pretraining | |
| Physiological | Monitoring |
| Imaging in chosen intervals on respiratory/cardiac function curve | |
| Skip data with motion above predefined threshold | |