Title of article :
The impact of physiologic noise correction applied to functional MRI of pain at 1.5 and 3.0 T
Author/Authors :
Vogt، نويسنده , , Keith M. and Ibinson، نويسنده , , James W. and Schmalbrock، نويسنده , , Petra and Small، نويسنده , , Robert H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
8
From page :
819
To page :
826
Abstract :
This study quantified the impact of the well-known physiologic noise correction algorithm RETROICOR applied to a pain functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) experiment at two field strengths: 1.5 and 3.0 T. In the 1.5-T acquisition, there was an 8.2% decrease in time course variance (σ) and a 227% improvement in average model fit (increase in mean R2a). In the 3.0-T acquisition, significantly greater improvements were seen: a 10.4% decrease in σ and a 240% increase in mean R2a. End-tidal carbon dioxide data were also collected during scanning and used to account for low-frequency changes in cerebral blood flow; however, the impact of this correction was trivial compared to applying RETROICOR. Comparison between two implementations of RETROICOR demonstrated that oversampled physiologic data can be applied by either downsampling or modification of the timing in the RETROICOR algorithm, with equivalent results. Furthermore, there was no significant effect from manually aligning the physiologic data with corresponding image slices from an interleaved acquisition, indicating that RETROICOR accounts for timing differences between physiologic changes and MR signal changes. These findings suggest that RETROICOR correction, as it is commonly implemented, should be included as part of the data analysis for pain FMRI studies performed at 1.5 and 3.0 T.
Keywords :
Functional MRI , pain , Physiologic noise correction , RETROICOR , End-tidal CO2
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Record number :
1833170
Link To Document :
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