| Literature DB >> 32140847 |
Carolyn Beth McNabb1, Michael Lindner2,3, Shan Shen4, Laura Grace Burgess2, Kou Murayama2,5, Tom Johnstone2,6.
Abstract
Simultaneous multi-slice (SMS) imaging is a popular technique for increasing acquisition speed in echo-planar imaging (EPI) fMRI. However, SMS data are prone to motion sensitivity and slice leakage artefacts, which spread signal between simultaneously acquired slices. Relevant to motion sensitivity, artefacts from moving anatomic structures propagate along the phase-encoding (PE) direction. This is particularly relevant for eye movement. As signal from the eye is acquired along with signal from simultaneously excited slices during SMS, there is potential for signal to spread in-plane and between spatially remote slices. After identifying an artefact temporally coinciding with signal fluctuations in the eye and spatially distributed in correspondence with multiband slice acceleration and parallel imaging factors, we conducted a series of small experiments to investigate eye movement artefacts in SMS data and the contribution of PE direction to the invasiveness of these artefacts. Five healthy adult volunteers were scanned during a blinking task using a standard SMS-EPI protocol with posterior-to-anterior (P ≫ A), anterior-to-posterior (A ≫ P) or right-to-left (R ≫ L) PE direction. The intensity of signal fluctuations (artefact severity) was measured at expected artefact positions and control positions. We demonstrated a direct relationship between eye movements and artefact severity across expected artefact regions. Within-brain artefacts were apparent in P ≫ A- and A ≫ P-acquired data but not in R ≫ L data due to the shift in artefact positions. Further research into eye motion artefacts in SMS data is warranted but researchers should exercise caution with SMS protocols. We recommend rigorous piloting of SMS protocols and switching to R ≫ L/L ≫ R PE where feasible.Entities:
Keywords: Artefact; Eye blink; Multiband; Phase-encoding direction; Slice leakage; fMRI
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32140847 PMCID: PMC7166208 DOI: 10.1007/s00429-020-02053-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Struct Funct ISSN: 1863-2653 Impact factor: 3.270
Fig. 1Single volume displaying artefact in individual subject. Dynamic (four-dimensional) time series data are provided in Online Resource S1
Fig. 2a Expected artefact locations in right hemisphere for an individual subject (centres of expected artefact disks are shown). A–D represent artefact positions expected based on SMS slice acceleration factor (MB4) and CAIPI shift (FOV/3); Ag–Dg represent artefact positions expected based on parallel imaging factor (GRAPPA-2; ((FOV/3)*m + FOV/2), where m goes from 1 to M (M being the number of simultaneously acquired slices). Coordinates for artefact source: x = 32, y = 91, z = 18; indicated by white arrow. Control regions are shown in light pink: y and z coordinates are as shown in the figure; x coordinates are specified for each control mask. b Difference (± standard error of the mean; SEM, n = 4 subjects) in signal fluctuation between forceful blinking (on) and natural blinking (off) blocks; data are shown for expected artefact and control regions (right hemisphere). Control regions X and Y correspond to mean ± standard deviation [x y z] coordinates (in subject space) of [43 ± 1.9 65 ± 9.6 27 ± 4.0] and [67 ± 1.9 41 ± 9.6 44 ± 4.0], respectively
Fig. 3Signal variance within expected artefact slices acquired using PE direction P ≫ A (left columns), R ≫ L (middle right column) and R ≫ L tilted FOV (far right column). P ≫ A-encoded data are presented for two subjects to illustrate the replicability of the artefact