13:30 |
244. |
Velocity
Navigator Triggering for Motion Compensated PRF Thermometry
- not available
Florian Maier1, Axel Joachim Krafft1,
Jürgen W. Jenne2,3, Rüdiger Dillmann4,
Wolfhard Semmler1, Michael Bock1
1Medical
Physics in Radiology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ),
Heidelberg, Germany; 2Clinical Cooperation Unit
Radiation Oncology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ),
Heidelberg, Germany; 3Mediri GmbH, Heidelberg,
Germany; 4Institute of Anthropomatics, Karlsruhe
Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe, Germany
Proton resonance frequency
shift thermometry is sensitive to motion. Artifacts are
caused by tissue displacement and susceptibility changes. In
this work, a novel navigator technique for triggering MR
thermometry image acquisition is presented. Non-velocity and
velocity encoded navigator signals were acquired without
lengthening of TR. Based on the phase variation of
non-encoded values and the estimated velocity, trigger
events were generated. The measurements indicate that the
proposed triggered segmented EPI pulse sequence allows for
motion compensated thermometry of periodically moving
tissue. |
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13:42 |
245. |
Fat-Referenced MR Thermometry in Heterogeneous Tissue Using
IDEAL
Lorne
Hofstetter1, Desmond Teck Beng Yeo2,
Cynthia Davis2, Thomas K. Foo2
1GE Global Research, Niskayuna ,
NY, United States; 2GE Global Research,
Niskayuna, NY, United States
Time-varying, non-temperature
dependent phase changes affect the accuracy of conventional
phase difference proton resonance frequency shift (PRFS)
temperature mapping in the breast. We demonstrate a
fat-referenced PRFS technique capable of correcting for this
phase variation. This new approach reduced temperature
measurement error in the left breast by a factor of 3.6 and
in the right breast by a factor of 2.5 when compared to
conventional phase difference techniques (n = 1). |
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13:54 |
246. |
The
Effects of Spatial Sampling Choices on MR Temperature
Measurements
Nick Todd1, Josh
De Bever2, Urvi Vyas3, Allison Payne4,
Dennis L. Parker5
1Physics,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States;
2Robotics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT,
United States; 3Bioengineering, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States; 4Mechanical
Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United
States; 5Radiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, UT, United States
MR temperature maps are
necessarily a discrete representation of a physical quantity
that is continuously varying in both space and time. The
HIFU focal spot size can be smaller than the imaging voxel
dimensions. Due to averaging effects, it is likely that
different choices for the sampling grid location, voxel
size, and scan time will lead to variations in the measured
temperature distribution. In this abstract we present
simulation and experimental results quantifying the effects
of the sampling scheme on maximum temperature and thermal
dose, and show the effects of zero-filled-interpolation
post-processing on the measured maximum temperature and
thermal dose. |
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14:06 |
247. |
Reference-Less PRFS MR Thermometry Using a Thin Open Border
and the Harmonic Functions Theory: 2D Experimental
Validation
R Salomir1,
M Viallon1, Joerg Roland2, Sylvain
Terraz1, Denis Morel3, CD Becker1,
P Gross2
1Radiologie,
Hopital Universitaire de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland; 2Siemens
Medical Solutions, Erlangen, Germany; 3Anesthesiology,
University Hospitals of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
A new method for
reference-less MR thermometry is described based on the
fundamental theoretical frame of harmonic functions. The
method was implemented for a thin open border and validated
for 2D situation with HIFU heating in phantoms and in vivo
rabbit thigh, and also with baseline acquisition in
volunteers liver. Measurement accuracy in liver under free
breathing was as good as 0.5°C for 0.3 seconds temporal
resolution. The method is insensitive to periodic or
accidental motion, tissue expansion or drift, and to
external perturbation from interventional device. |
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14:18 |
248. |
Hybrid
Multi-Baseline and Referenceless PRF-Shift Thermometry
William A. Grissom1,2,
Andrew B. Holbrook3, Viola A. Rieke2,
Michael Lustig1, Juan A. Santos1,
Aravind Swaminathan, Michael V. McConnell, Kim Butts Pauly2
1Electrical
Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United
States; 2Radiology, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, United States; 3Bioengineering,
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States
We introduce a new
temperature estimation method that is a hybrid of
multi-baseline and referenceless methods. From
multi-baseline methods the hybrid method inherits the
ability to estimate temperature in the presence of
rapidly-varying background anatomical phase. From
referenceless methods the hybrid method inherits robustness
to smooth main field shifts during thermal therapy. The
method is demonstrated in the heart and liver. |
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14:30 |
249. |
MRI
Monitoring of Skull-Base Heating in Transcranial Focused
Ultrasound Ablation
Yuexi Huang1,
Junho Song1, Kullervo Hynynen1,2
1Sunnybrook
Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada; 2Department
of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON,
Canada
In transcranial focused
ultrasound ablation, the heating of the outer skull surface
has been reduced by a hemispherical design of phased-array
transducers and active cooling of the skull surface with
water circulation. However, the potential heating of the
skull base has not been brought into much attention. In this
work, experiments were performed with a MR-guided
transcranial focused ultrasound system on a full human skull
sample to investigate the heating of the skull base. MR
thermometry was applied to measure the temperature change of
the phantom adjacent to the skull base. The distance of the
foci to the bone was varied to measure a safety margin for
avoiding significant skull base heating. |
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14:42 |
250. |
Temperature Measurement Nearby an Iceball Using the Proton
Resonance Frequency Method: Recalculation of Susceptibility
Artifacts
Antje Kickhefel1, Rares Salomir2,3,
Jörg Roland4, Patrick Gross4, Fritz
Schick5, Clifford R. Weiss6
1Eberhard-Karls-University
Tübingen , Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany; 2University
Hospitals of Geneva, Switzerland; 3 University
Hospitals of Geneva; 4Siemens Healthcare,
Erlangen, Germany; 5Eberhard-Karls-University
Tübingen, Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany; 6Department
of Radiology, The Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, Baltimore, United States
The study demonstrates that
susceptibility artifacts in GRE phase image induced by ice
ball can be corrected allowing the PRF method to be used to
monitor the near zero temperature during cryoablation.
Susceptibility artifacts were corrected in post-processing.
First the susceptibility contrast between frozen and melted
meat was determined and second the magnetic perturbation was
calculated using a convolution filter in the k-space. The
susceptibility artifacts were fully corrected. In
conclusion, using an in-line post processing system, this
method could be applied during clinical MR-guided
cryotherapy, and allow for the non-invasive monitoring of
near zero temperatures. |
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14:54 |
251. |
PRF Based
MR-Thermometry on Abdominal Organs: A Pragmatic Comparison
of Referenceless Vs Multi-Baseline
Baudouin Denis de
Senneville1, Sébastien Roujol1,2,
Chrit Moonen1, Mario Ries1
1Laboratory for Molecular and Functional Imaging: From
Physiology to Therapy, CNRS/ University Bordeaux 2,
Bordeaux, Aquitaine, France; 2LaBRI, CNRS/
University Bordeaux 1, Talence, Aquitaine, France
Reliable temperature and
thermal-dose measurements using PRF based MR-thermometry for
MR-guided ablation therapy on abdominal organs require a
robust correction of artefacts induced by the target
displacement through an inhomogeneous and time-variant
magnetic field. The presented study combines the two most
promising candidates for this role, the multi-baseline and
the referenceless method, with a real-time in-plane motion
correction which permits thermal-dose calculations and
evaluates the practical aspects of both methods in an
ex-vivo RF-ablation and an in-vivo high-intensity focused
ultrasound ablation of a porcine kidney. |
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15:06 |
252. |
Quantitative Perfusion Analysis for Transcatheter
Intraarterial Perfusion MR Imaging
Dingxin Wang1,
Johnathan Chung2, Robert Lewandowski2,
Richard Tang2, Rachel Klein2, Reed
Omary1,3, Andrew Larson1,3
1Departments
of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern
University, Chicago, IL, United States; 2Department
of Radiology, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United
States; 3Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer
Center, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United States
In this study, we presented a
new quantitative TRIP-MRI perfusion analysis approach, and
evaluated its efficacy in a gel perfusion phantom and in
rabbits with VX2 liver tumors during TAE. Our results
successfully evaluated the efficacy of this proposed
perfusion analysis method for TRIP-MRI datasets in the
perfusion phantom, and demonstrated the use of quantitative
TRIP-MRI to monitor reductions in liver tumor perfusion
during TAE. |
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15:18 |
253. |
MR-Based
Dosimetry of 166holmium-Loaded Microspheres for
Internal Radiation Therapy Treatment Planning
Peter
Roland Seevinck1, Tim C. de Wit2,
Gerrit Hendrik van de Maat1, Maarten A.D. Vente3,
Mattijs Elschot3, Mark Konijnenberg4,
Johannes F.W. Nijsen3, Chris JG Bakker1,2
1Image Sciences Institute,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands;
2Dept. of Radiology, University Medical Center
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands; 3Dept. of Nucleair
Medicine, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands; 4Research and Development,
Mallinckrodt Medical BV, Covidien, Petten, Netherlands
The potential of MRI for dose
calculations of Holmium-166 loaded microspheres to enable MR-based
treatment planning of transcatheter radioembolization of
hepatic malignancies was investigated. MRI and SPECT
experiments were conducted using an anthropomorphic agarose
gel phantom containing tumor-simulating gel samples with
known amounts of 166Ho-PLLA-MS. Excellent
agreement was observed both qualitatively and quantitatively
when comparing MR-based to SPECT-based dose maps to
reference data obtained with a dose calibrator. In
conclusion, MR-based dosimetry of 166Ho-PLLA-MS
was demonstrated to be feasible, indicating the potential of
MR-based dosimetry for planning, guidance and evaluation of
transcatheter radioembolization treatment of hepatic
malignancies with 166Ho-PLLA-MS. |
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