IVCVAug 24, 2021

Correcting inter-scan motion artefacts in quantitative R1 mapping at 7T

arXiv:2108.10943v2Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses motion-induced errors in MRI R1 estimation, particularly at 7T where body coil references are unavailable, offering a simplified and applicable solution for neuroimaging researchers, though it is incremental as it builds on existing correction schemes.

The paper tackled inter-scan motion artefacts in quantitative R1 mapping at 7T by introducing two alternative correction methods that outperform the established scheme, reducing artefacts at both 3T and 7T, with reproducibility converging on no-motion conditions when position-specific transmit field effects were included.

Purpose: Inter-scan motion is a substantial source of error in $R_1$ estimation, and can be expected to increase at 7T where $B_1$ fields are more inhomogeneous. The established correction scheme does not translate to 7T since it requires a body coil reference. Here we introduce two alternatives that outperform the established method. Since they compute relative sensitivities they do not require body coil images. Theory: The proposed methods use coil-combined magnitude images to obtain the relative coil sensitivities. The first method efficiently computes the relative sensitivities via a simple ratio; the second by fitting a more sophisticated generative model. Methods: $R_1$ maps were computed using the variable flip angle (VFA) approach. Multiple datasets were acquired at 3T and 7T, with and without motion between the acquisition of the VFA volumes. $R_1$ maps were constructed without correction, with the proposed corrections, and (at 3T) with the previously established correction scheme. Results: At 3T, the proposed methods outperform the baseline method. Inter-scan motion artefacts were also reduced at 7T. However, reproducibility only converged on that of the no motion condition if position-specific transmit field effects were also incorporated. Conclusion: The proposed methods simplify inter-scan motion correction of $R_1$ maps and are applicable at both 3T and 7T, where a body coil is typically not available. The open-source code for all methods is made publicly available.

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