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"AI-Based Motion Artifact Severity Estimation in Undersampled MRI Allowing for Selection of Appropriate Reconstruction Models"

Laurens Beljaards, Nicola Pezzotti, Chinmay Rao, Mariya Doneva, Matthias J.P. van Osch and Marius Staring

Abstract

Background: MR acquisition is a time consuming process, making it susceptible to patient motion during scanning. Even motion in the order of a millimeter can introduce severe blurring and ghosting artifacts, potentially necessitating re-acquisition. MRI can be accelerated by acquiring only a fraction of k-space, combined with advanced reconstruction techniques leveraging coil sensitivity profiles and prior knowledge. AI-based reconstruction techniques have recently been popularized, but generally assume an ideal setting without intra-scan motion.

Purpose: To retrospectively detect and quantify the severity of motion artifacts in undersampled MRI data. This may prove valuable as a safety mechanism for AI-based approaches, provide useful information to the reconstruction method, or prompt for re-acquisition while the patient is still in the scanner.

Methods: We developed a deep learning approach that detects and quantifies motion artifacts in undersampled brain MRI. We demonstrate that synthetically motion-corrupted data can be leveraged to train the CNN-based motion artifact estimator, generalizing well to real-world data. Additionally, we leverage the motion artifact estimator by using it as a selector for a motion-robust reconstruction model in case a considerable amount of motion was detected, and a high data consistency model otherwise.

Results: Training and validation were performed on 4387 and 1304 synthetically motion-corrupted images and their uncorrupted counterparts, respectively. Testing was performed on undersampled in vivo motion-corrupted data from 28 volunteers, where our model distinguished head motion from motion-free scans with 91% and 96% accuracy when trained on synthetic and on real data, respectively. It predicted a manually defined quality label (`Good', `Medium' or `Bad' quality) correctly in 76% and 85% of the time when trained on synthetic and real data, respectively. When used as a selector it selected the appropriate reconstruction network 93% of the time, achieving near optimal SSIM values.

Conclusions: The proposed method quantified motion artifact severity in undersampled MRI data with high accuracy, enabling real-time motion artifact detection that can help improve the safety and quality of AI-based reconstructions.

 

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Copyright © 2024 by the authors. Published version © 2024 by American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM). Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint or republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works, must be obtained from the copyright holder.

 

BibTeX entry

@article{Beljaards:2024,
author = {Beljaards, Laurens and Pezzotti, Nicola and Rao, Chinmay and Doneva, Mariya and van Osch, Matthias J.P. and Staring, Marius},
title = {AI-Based Motion Artifact Severity Estimation in Undersampled MRI Allowing for Selection of Appropriate Reconstruction Models},
journal = {Medical Physics},
year = {2024},
}

last modified: 04-01-2024 |webmaster |Copyright 2004-2024 © by Marius Staring