J Magn Reson Imaging. 2015 May;41(5):1353-64 doi: 10.1002/jmri.24678. 2014 Jun 17.

Motion artifact reduction in pediatric diffusion tensor imaging using fast prospective correction

Alhamud A, Taylor PA, Laughton B, van der Kouwe AJ, Meintjes EM.

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate the patterns of head motion in scans of young children and to examine the influence of corrective techniques, both qualitatively and quantitatively. We investigate changes that both retrospective (with and without diffusion table reorientation) and prospective (implemented with a short navigator sequence) motion correction induce in the resulting diffusion tensor measures.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighteen pediatric subjects (aged 5-6 years) were scanned using 1) a twice-refocused, 2D diffusion pulse sequence, 2) a prospectively motion-corrected, navigated diffusion sequence with reacquisition of a maximum of five corrupted diffusion volumes, and 3) a T1 -weighted structural image. Mean fractional anisotropy (FA) values in white and gray matter regions, as well as tractography in the brainstem and projection fibers, were evaluated to assess differences arising from retrospective (via FLIRT in FSL) and prospective motion correction. In addition to human scans, a stationary phantom was also used for further evaluation.
RESULTS: In several white and gray matter regions retrospective correction led to significantly (P  CONCLUSION: Due to the heterogeneity of brain structures and the comparatively low resolution (∼2 mm) of diffusion data using 2D single shot sequencing, retrospective motion correction is susceptible to distortion from partial voluming. These changes often negatively bias diffusion tensor imaging parameters. Prospective motion correction was shown to produce smaller changes.

PMID: 24935904