The homogeneity and stability of the static magnetic field are of paramount importance to the accuracy of MR procedures that are sensitive to phase errors and magnetic field inhomogeneity. It is shown that intense gradient utilization in clinical horizontal-bore superconducting MR scanners of three different vendors results in main magnetic fields that vary on a long time scale both spatially and temporally by amounts of order 0.8-2.5 ppm. The observed spatial changes have linear and quadratic variations that are strongest along the z direction. It is shown that the effect of such variations is of sufficient magnitude to completely obfuscate thermal phase shifts measured by proton-resonance frequency-shift MR thermometry and certainly affect accuracy. In addition, field variations cause signal loss and line-broadening in MR spectroscopy, as exemplified by a fourfold line-broadening of metabolites over the course of a 45 min human brain study. The field variations are consistent with resistive heating of the magnet structures. It is concluded that correction strategies are required to compensate for these spatial and temporal field drifts for phase-sensitive MR protocols. It is demonstrated that serial field mapping and phased difference imaging correction protocols can substantially compensate for the drift effects observed in the MR thermometry and spectroscopy experiments.
Interventional, "loopless antenna" MRI detectors are currently limited to 1.5 T. This study investigates whether loopless antennae offer signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and field-of-view (FOV) advantages at higher fields, and whether device heating can be controlled within safe limits. The absolute SNR performance of loopless antennae from 0.5 to 5 T is investigated both analytically, using electromagnetic (EM) dipole antenna theory, and numerically with the EM method of moments, and found to vary almost quadratically with field strength depending on the medium's electrical properties, the noise being dominated by direct sample conduction losses. The prediction is confirmed by measurements of the absolute SNR of low-loss loopless antennae fabricated for 1.5, 3, and 4.7 T, immersed in physiologically comparable saline. Gains of 3.8 +/- 0.2- and 9.7 +/- 0.3-fold in SNR, and approximately 10- and 50-fold gains in the useful FOV area are observed at 3 and 4.7 T, respectively, compared to 1.5 T. Heat testing of a 3 T biocompatible nitinol-antenna fabricated with a redesigned decoupling circuit shows maximum heating of approximately 1 degrees C for MRI operating at high MRI exposure levels. Experiments in the rabbit aorta confirm the SNR and FOV advantages of the 3 T antenna versus an equivalent commercial 1.5 T device in vivo. This work is the first to study the performance of experimental internal MRI detectors above 1.5 T. The large SNR and FOV gains realized present a major opportunity for high-resolution imaging of vascular pathology and MRI-guided intervention.
The ''loopless antenna'' is an interventional MRI detector consisting of a tuned coaxial cable and an extended inner conductor or ''whip''. A limitation is the poor sensitivity afforded at, and immediately proximal to, its distal end, which is exacerbated by the extended whip length when the whip is uniformly insulated. It is shown here that tapered insulation dramatically improves the distal sensitivity of the loopless antenna by pushing the current sensitivity toward the tip. The absolute signal-to-noise ratio is numerically computed by the electromagnetic method-of-moments for three resonant 3-T antennae with no insulation, uniform insulation, and with linearly tapered insulation. The analysis shows that tapered insulation provides an~400% increase in signal-to-noise ratio in trans-axial planes 1 cm from the tip and a 16-fold increase in the sensitive area as compared to an equivalent, uniformly insulated antenna. These findings are directly confirmed by phantom experiments and by MRI of an aorta specimen. The results demonstrate that numerical electromagnetic signal-tonoise ratio analysis can accurately predict the loopless detector's signal-to-noise ratio and play a central role in optimizing its design. The manifold improvement in distal signal-to-noise ratio afforded by redistributing the insulation should improve the loopless antenna's utility for interventional MRI. Magn Reson Med 63:797-802,
Temperature sensing using microwave radiometry has proven value for non-invasively measuring the absolute temperature of tissues inside the human body. However, current clinical radiometers operate in GHz or infrared frequency ranges; this limits their depth of penetration since the human body is not "transparent" at these frequencies. To address this problem, we have previously designed and built an advanced, near-field radiometer operating at VHF frequencies (64MHz) with a ~100 KHz bandwidth. The radiometer has performed accurate temperature measurements to within ±0.1º C, over a tested physiological range of 28-40º C in saline phantoms whose electric properties match those of human tissue. In this work we analyze radiofrequency (RF) coil designs suitable for RF Radiometry. We investigate the coil profile sensitivity to look where temperature information is coming from and the depth of penetration associated with the receiver used. We also look into the virtues of using multi-turn coils versus single loop coils. We conclude that by using multi-turn coils the received noise signal is more sensitive to sample noise and temperature can be estimated more accurately especially with the use of smaller receivers.
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