Ultrasensitive magnetoelectric (ME) sensors have been developed using magnetostrictive/piezoelectric laminate heterostructures. This paper discusses a highly interdisciplinary design of a room temperature biomagnetic liver susceptometry system (BLS) based on the ME sensors. The ME-sensor based BLS maintains the ultrahigh sensitivity to detect the weak AC biomagnetic signals and introduces a low equivalent magnetic noise. The results reveal a “turning point” and successfully indicate the output signals to be linearly responsive to iron concentrations from normal iron level (0.05 mgFe/gliver phantom) to 5 mgFe/gliver phantom iron overload level (100X overdose). Further, the introduction of the water-bag technique shows the promise on the automatic deduction of the background (tissue) signal, enabling an even higher sensitivity and better signal-to-noise (SNR). With these improvements, it becomes feasible to get improved characterization flexibility and the field distribution mapping potential via signal processing from the correlations of multiple sensors in the system. Considering the wide presence of biomagnetic signals in human organs, the potential impact of such biomagnetic devices on medicine and health care could be enormous and far-reaching.
Iron plays a vital role in human body. Liver Iron Concentration (LIC) is directly correlated to total body iron and can be an important indicator to a variety of pathologies. Non-invasive methods to quantitatively assess tissue iron with low cost and high sensitivity have drawn vast interests and investments. Among various methods, the magnetoelectric (ME) sensor based biomagnetic liver susceptometer (BLS) is of great promise because it operates at room temperature but with the same principle as that of the well-developed SQUID (Superconducting Quantum Interference Device). Here, we report a magnetoelectric (ME) sensor based BLS system exploiting the recently developed PIN-PMN-PT piezoelectric single crystal. The newly developed ME BLS, which employs the horizontal scanning mechanism with a water bath interface to automatically eliminate the diamagnetic background of the tissues and irregular shape of torso, exhibits an overall sensitivity advancement (300X) to the sensor system previously reported. A linear correlation (R2 = 0.97) found between the system measurements and the biopsy data demonstrates the validity of the system. The ability to detect signals from only 3cc of mouse liver tissue samples suggests a high spatial resolution which could be used for finer scanning and enable magnetic distribution image and profiling.
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