Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre, University of Nottingham, University Park, UK.
Magn Reson Imaging. 2009 Oct;27(8):1046-57. doi: 10.1016/j.mri.2009.02.006. Epub 2009 Apr 15.
Although it has been shown that the phase of the MR signal from the brain is particularly prone to variation due to respiration, the overall physiological information contained in phase time series is not well understood. Here, we explore the different physiological processes contributing to the phase time series noise, identify their spatiotemporal characteristics and examine their relationship to BOLD-related and non-BOLD-related physiological noise in the magnitude time series. This was performed by manipulating the contribution of physiological noise to the total signal variance by modulating the TE and voxel volume, and using a short TR in order to adequately sample physiological signal fluctuations. The phase and magnitude signals were compared both before and after removal of signal fluctuations at the primary respiratory and cardiac frequencies with RETROICOR. We found that the temporal phase noise increased with TE at a faster rate than predicted by 1/TSNR as a result of physiological noise. As suggested by previous studies, the primary contributor to phase physiological noise was respiration-related effects which were manifested at a large scale (>1 cm). Notably, RETROICOR removed respiration-related large-scale artifacts and this resulted in considerable improvements in the temporal phase stability (7-90%). Physiological noise in the magnitude time series after RETROICOR consisted of low-frequency BOLD-related fluctuations (<0.13 Hz) localized to gray matter and the vasculature, and fluctuations in the vasculature correlated with slow (<0.1 Hz) variations in respiration volume and cardiac rhythm. Physiological noise in the phase signal after RETROICOR also occurred in frequencies below 0.13 Hz and was consistent with (1) residual large-scale magneto-mechanical effects correlated with slow variations in respiration volume and cardiac rhythm over time, and (2) local scale (<1 cm) effects localized in gray matter and vasculature most likely due to vascular dephasing mediated by a BOLD susceptibility change. While BOLD-related magnitude noise exhibited a TE dependence similar to BOLD, the 'BOLD-related' noise in the phase data increased with increasing TE and thus caused the overall phase noise to increase at a faster rate with TE than predicted by 1/TSNR. Interestingly, the spatial specificity of this effect was more evident for the higher resolution phase data, as opposed to the magnitude data, suggesting that at a higher spatial resolution the phase signal may contain more information on physiological processes than the magnitude signal.
虽然已经表明,来自大脑的磁共振信号的相位特别容易由于呼吸而发生变化,但相位时间序列中包含的整体生理信息还没有得到很好的理解。在这里,我们探索了导致相位时间序列噪声的不同生理过程,确定了它们的时空特征,并研究了它们与幅度时间序列中与 BOLD 相关和非 BOLD 相关的生理噪声的关系。这是通过调制 TE 和体素体积来改变生理噪声对总信号方差的贡献,以及使用短 TR 来充分采样生理信号波动来实现的。在使用 RETROICOR 去除主要呼吸和心脏频率的信号波动之前和之后,比较了相位和幅度信号。我们发现,由于生理噪声的影响,相位噪声随 TE 的增加速度比 1/TSNR 预测的要快。正如先前的研究表明的那样,相位生理噪声的主要贡献者是与呼吸相关的效应,这些效应表现出较大的尺度 (>1 cm)。值得注意的是,RETROICOR 去除了与呼吸相关的大尺度伪影,这导致了时间相位稳定性的显著提高(7-90%)。经过 RETROICOR 处理后的幅度时间序列中的生理噪声包括局部位于灰质和脉管系统的低频与 BOLD 相关的波动(<0.13 Hz),以及脉管系统中的波动与呼吸量和心脏节律的缓慢(<0.1 Hz)变化相关。经过 RETROICOR 处理后的相位信号中的生理噪声也发生在低于 0.13 Hz 的频率下,与(1)随时间推移与呼吸量和心脏节律的缓慢变化相关的残留大尺度磁机械效应,以及(2)局部尺度(<1 cm)效应一致,这些效应定位于灰质和脉管系统中,最有可能是由于血氧水平依赖(BOLD)敏感性变化介导的血管去相位。虽然与 BOLD 相关的幅度噪声表现出与 BOLD 相似的 TE 依赖性,但相位数据中的“与 BOLD 相关”噪声随 TE 的增加而增加,因此导致整体相位噪声随 TE 的增加速度比 1/TSNR 预测的要快。有趣的是,这种效应的空间特异性在更高分辨率的相位数据中比幅度数据更为明显,这表明在更高的空间分辨率下,相位信号可能比幅度信号包含更多的生理过程信息。