Title of article :
Effect of Physiological Noise on Thoracolumbar Spinal Cord Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in 3T Magnetic Field
Author/Authors :
Dehghani ، Hamed Department of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering - Faculty of Medicine, Research Center for Molecular and Cellular Imaging (RCMCI) - Tehran University of Medical Science , Oghabian ، Mohammad Ali Department of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering - Faculty of Medicine, Research Center for Molecular and Cellular Imaging (RCMCI) - Tehran University of Medical Science , Batouli ، Amir Hosein Department of Neuroscience - School of Advanced Technologies in Medicine, Research Center for Molecular and Cellular Imaging (RCMCI) - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Arab Kheradmand ، Jalil Shefa Neuroscience Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Khatibi ، Ali Centre of Precision Rehabilitation for Spinal Pain (CPR Spine), School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, Centre for Human Brain Health - University of Birmingham
From page :
737
To page :
752
Abstract :
Introduction: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) methods have been used to study sensorimotor processing in the spinal cord. However, these techniques confront unwanted noises to the measured signal from the physiological fluctuations. In the spinal cord imaging, most of the challenges are consequences of cardiac and respiratory movement artifacts that are considered as significant sources of noise, especially in the thoracolumbar region. In this study, we investigated the effect of each source of physiological noise and their contribution to the outcome of the analysis of the blood-oxygen-level-dependent signal in the human thoracolumbar spinal cord. Methods: Fifteen young healthy male volunteers participated in the study, and pain stimuli were delivered on the L5 dermatome between the two malleoli. Respiratory and cardiac signals were recorded during the imaging session, and the generated respiration and cardiac regressors were included in the general linear model for quantification of the effect of each of them on the task-analysis results. The sum of active voxels of the clusters was calculated in the spinal cord in three correction states (respiration correction only, cardiac correction only, and respiration and cardiac noise corrections) and analyzed with analysis of variance statistical test and receiver operating characteristic curve. Results: The results illustrated that cardiac noise correction had an effective role in increasing the active voxels (Mean ±SD= 23.46 ±9.46) compared to other noise correction methods. Cardiac effects were higher than other physiological noise sources. Conclusion: In summary, our results indicate great respiration effects on the lumbar and thoracolumbar spinal cord fMRI, and its contribution to the heartbeat effect can be a significant variable in the individual fMRI data analysis. Displacement of the spinal cord and the effects of this noise in the thoracolumbar and lumbar spinal cord fMRI results are significant and cannot be ignored.
Keywords :
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) , Spinal cord , Physiological noise , Imaging , General linear model
Journal title :
Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
Journal title :
Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
Record number :
2619971
Link To Document :
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