Combining SPARSE fMRI Designs with SENSE at High Field Strength

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Kombination des SPARSE-fMRI-Designs mit SENSE bei hoher Feldstärke
Autor:Scheef, L.; Daamen, M.; Fehse, U.; Landsberg, M.W.; Granath, D.O.; Effenberg, Alfred Oliver
Erschienen in:RöFo : Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Röntgenstrahlen und der bildgebenden Verfahren
Veröffentlicht:178 (2006), 1, o.A., Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0015-8151, 1438-9010
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Erfassungsnummer:PU201109007741
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

Purpose: Acoustic noise has always been a problem for fMRI, especially if acoustic stimuli are used. However, moving to higher field strength enhances this problem drastically. The acoustic noise can mask the stimulus, and the stimulus-bound fMRI-signal might be contaminated or even eliminated by the BOLD-signal of the scanner noise. Using non-continuous acquisition schemes by separating the acquisition of successive volumes by a couple of seconds (so called “SPARSE“ designs) avoids the acoustic masking of the stimuli and allows for deconvolution of the haemodynamic response function (hrf) induced by the acoustic noise itself and the stimulus bound hrf. However, these paradigms are extremely inefficient (regarding time and statistical power) and inflexible in the view of timing. The optimal inter-stimulus interval is about 9s, and it is not always possible to deliver the stimuli and to acquire the volunteer response and the MRI data within this short time slot. Parallel imaging techniques might help in this situation by increasing the acquisition speed by a factor of 2-3. However, applying parallel imaging techniques as sensitivity encoding (SENSE) lead to a reduction of SNR, and it is questionable if the combination of SENSE with SPARSE designs provides sufficient power to detect brain activations during an fMRI experiment. Goal of this study was to investigate if SENSE and SPARSE-designs can be combined at high field strength and still have sufficient power to detect main effects and differential effects in fMRI-paradigms.
Methods: 16 right-handed volunteers were examined using an acoustic paradigm. The paradigm was designed to investigate multi-sensory integration by presenting visual and acoustic stimuli. The visual stimuli consisted of short video sequences of a vertically jumping person. The acoustic stimuli represented the jump acoustically by modulation of the amplitude of the standard pitch A with the pressure applied to the ground during the jump (='sonification'). The volunteers had to judge the height of the jump based either on the visual information (Cond A), visual and acoustic information (Cond B) or the acoustic information alone (Cond C). The Cond B contained two subconditions using either concordant acoustic stimuli (Cond B1) or discordant acoustic stimuli (Cond B2), the latter condition presenting a sound that did not fit to the video seen on the screen. The MRI-examinations were performed on a Achieva 3.0T whole body MRI (Philips, Best, Netherlands), using a 8 channel SENSE head coil (MRI-Devices) and a GE-Single Shot EPI sequence with a SENSE-Factor of two (TE/TR/Flip=35/1.54/90°, 3.6×3.6×3.6mm3, 121 dyn. scans / total scan time: ~ 18min). We calculated three contrasts: 1. Cond A - Cond C, 2. Cond C - Cond A and 3. Cond B1- Cond B2. The first contrast should reveal the visual stream, whereas the second contrast should show the primary and secondary auditory areas as well as the acoustic association cortex. The third contrast was used to test if even subtle differences can be detected. In particular, Cond B1- Cond B2 should show an activation of the multimodal integration areas around the superior temporal sulcus (STS). All contrasts were examined at a threshold of p<0.05 corrected. Results: The contrast (Cond A - Cond C) did show the activation of the complete dorsal visual stream, whereas the opposite contrast (Cond C - Cond A), revealed the activation of the auditory system including the auditory association areas. The differential contrast, Cond B1- Cond B2, showed activation of the STS as expected. Conclusion: Using a sonification paradigm we were able to show that at high field strength even extremely inefficient fMRI-designs, as the combination of SENSE and SPARSE-designs, can be successfully combined and are capable of detecting even subtle activation changes. Verf.-Referat