4.5 Article

Robust retrospective motion correction of head motion using navigator-based and markerless motion tracking techniques

Journal

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mrm.29705

Keywords

brain MRI; fat navigator; markerless head motion tracking; MRI motion artifact correction; retrospective motion correction

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This study investigated the artifacts arising from different types of head motion in brain MR images and how well these artifacts can be compensated using retrospective correction based on two different motion-tracking techniques. The study found that image quality could be recovered in cases of stepwise and slow diagonal motion using both motion estimation techniques. However, both methods struggled to correct for all motion artifacts in the case of circular motion.
Purpose: This study investigated the artifacts arising from different types of head motion in brain MR images and how well these artifacts can be compensated using retrospective correction based on two different motion-tracking techniques.Methods: MPRAGE images were acquired using a 3 T MR scanner on a cohort of nine healthy participants. Subjects moved their head to generate circular motion (4 or 6 cycles/min), stepwise motion (small and large) and simulated realistic motion (nodding and slow diagonal motion), based on visual instructions. One MPRAGE scan without deliberate motion was always acquired as a no motion reference. Three dimensional fat-navigator (FatNavs) and a Tracoline markerless device (TracInnovations) were used to obtain motion estimates and images were separately reconstructed retrospectively from the raw data based on these different motion estimates.Results: Image quality was recovered from both motion tracking techniques in our stepwise and slow diagonal motion scenarios in almost all cases, with the apparent visual image quality comparable to the no-motion case. FatNav-based motion correction was further improved in the case of stepwise motion using a skull masking procedure to exclude non-rigid motion of the neck from the co-registration step. In the case of circular motion, both methods struggled to correct for all motion artifacts.Conclusion: High image quality could be recovered in cases of stepwise and slow diagonal motion using both motion estimation techniques. The circular motion scenario led to more severe image artifacts that could not be fully compensated by the retrospective motion correction techniques used.

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