13:30 |
0428.
|
Detunable Transmit Array
and Flexible Receive Array for 7T Shoulder Imaging
Ryan Brown1, Bei Zhang1, Cem M
Deniz1,2, Gene Young Cho1,2,
Cornel Stefanescu1, Shumin Wang3,
Daniel K Sodickson1, and Graham C Wiggins1
1Radiology, New York University School of
Medicine, New York, NY, United States, 2Sackler
Institute of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, New York
University School of Medicine, New York, NY, United
States, 3MRI
Research Center, Auburn University, Auburn University,
AL, United States
Musculoskeletal imaging is becoming a fruitful
application at 7T, particularly for the knee and other
extremities. Design of a 7T coil for shoulder imaging is
more challenging due to the inability to surround the
shoulder with a birdcage and the challenges of RF
inhomogeneity. A 7T shoulder coil was constructed with a
flexible detunable 8 element loop array for transmit and
a 10 element flexible domed receive array. Applying
birdcage-like phase to the transmit elements produced a
serviceable transmit excitation, and SNR gains in deep
cartilage of better than 2-fold were obtained compared
to 3T.
|
13:42 |
0429. |
An Open Faced 4 ch. Loop
Transmit / 16 ch. Receive Array Coil for HiRes fMRI at 7
Tesla
Gregor Adriany1, Matt Waks2,
Brandon Tramm2, Scott Schillak2,
Essa Yacoub1, Federico de Martino1,3,
Pierre-Francois Van de Moortele1, Thomas
Naselaris1, Cheryl Olman1, Tommy
Vaughan1, and Kamil Ugurbil1
1Center for Magnetic Resonance Research,
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States, 2Virtumed
LLC, Minneapolis, MN, United States,3Maastricht
University, Netherlands
Utilizing rapid prototyping for an open-faced holder
design a 4 channel loop transmit /16 channel receive
array coil was built. The coil operates inside a
spatially constrictive head gradient insert but still
supports full visual field task presentation. The design
is particularly suitable for visual, occipital and
auditory cortex neuroscience applications. The coil did
not require subject dependent tuning or matching, saving
valuable setup time. Significant improvements in
transmit efficiency and SNR over comparable whole head
arrays were observed.
|
13:54 |
0430.
|
A 16-channel micro strip
Tx/Rx array for bilateral breast imaging at 7 Tesla
Stephan Orzada1,2, Stefan Maderwald1,
Linda Kopp1, Mark E. Ladd1,2, Kai
Nassenstein2, and Andreas K. Bitz1,2
1Erwin L. Hahn Institute for MRI, Essen, NRW,
Germany, 2Department
of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology and
Neuroradiology, University Hospital Essen, Essen, NRW,
Germany
Breast imaging at 7 Tesla is promising due to the higher
SNR in comparison to 1.5 and 3 Tesla, but at the same
time it is challenging due to the short wavelength and
the lack of a body coil for transmission. In this work
we present a 16-channel transmit/receive array for
bilateral breast MRI at 7 Tesla consisting of two
U-shaped arrays of 8 micro strip lines each.
|
14:06 |
0431.
|
19-channel Rx array coil
and 4-channel Tx loop array for cervical spinal cord imaging
at 7T MRI
Wei Zhao1, Julien Cohen-Adad1,
Jonathan R Polimeni1, Bastien Guerin1,
Boris Keil1, Peter Serano1, Azma
Mareyam1, Philipp Hoecht2, and
Lawrence L Wald1
1Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical
Imaging, Dept. of Radiology Massachusetts General
Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Charlestown,
Massachusetts, United States, 2Siemens
Medical Solutions USA Inc., Charlestown, Massachusetts,
United States
In this work, we developed a 19-channel receive array
and a 4-channel parallel transmit loop array for imaging
the cervical spinal cord at 7T. We addressed the
challenge of obtaining uniform B1+ excitation by
mounting a 4-channel degenerate-loop transmit array in
the plane posterior to the subject similar to previous
work. The 4-channel transmit loop array had the
sufficient decoupling <-16dB between each element and
produced a relatively uniform excitation when driven
with a single amplifier with a 45 degree phase increment
in each element. The receive array loops closely
contoured to the body and yielded high SNR performance
as well as the ability to accelerated EPI imaging with
R=3 in the C-spine.
|
14:18 |
0432. |
An Investigation of RF
Frontend Scalability
Yudong Zhu1, Xing Yang1, Bei Zhang1,
and Leeor Alon1
1NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York,
United States
Most workhorse receive coils are each optimized for a
certain body region, parallel acceleration, and
frequency. To improve workflow a significant recent
development strives to consolidate a scanner’s suite of
coils with a multi-element coil ensemble that encloses a
subject in a fixed way but allows application-dependent
multi-port signal combination. The task of creating a
“one-structure-fits-all” coil to replace dedicated coils
is very challenging. We explore the perspective of
optimizing RF frontend scalability, the ability for a
same RF coil structure to adapt to most tasks by
leveraging flexible and advantageous signal combination
afforded by a large number of channels.
|
14:30 |
0433.
|
Noise contributions in
receive coil arrays
Matteo Pavan1, Roger Lüchinger1,
and Klaas Paul Pruessmann1
1ETH and University Zurich, Zurich, ZH,
Switzerland
Receive coil arrays are used in MR to maximize the
Signal to Noise Ration (SNR) of measured signal.
Engineer’s goal is to build such arrays with high
filling factor using electrical components with minimal
losses, and decoupled coil elements such that elements
noise and noise correlation is reduced. In this work we
experimentally show that the design a proper matching
network is critical because the matching network is the
first component in the receive chain. Simple one channel
and two channels experiments were performed with the use
of an Automatic Matching Network (AMN) system.
|
14:42 |
0434.
|
Bespoke Coils:
Screen-Printed, Tailored Flexible MRI Receiver Coils
Joseph Corea1, Anita Flynn1, Greig
Scott2, Ana Claudia Arias1, and
Michael Lustig1
1EECS, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, California,
United States, 2Electrical
Engineering, Stanford, Stanford, California, United
States
Our aim is to fabricate custom-made (e.g. bespoke)
tailored flexible coils that can fit to a wide variety
of patients and anatomy, thus improving sensitivity and
signal-to-noise. Utilizing advances in printed
electronics, we present a new technique for designing
and fabricating flexible MRI receiver coils. These coils
are printed on cloth-like mesh substrates using a screen
printing technique. All components are processed from
solution and printed onto several plastic mesh
substrates.
|
14:54 |
0435.
|
An investigation on the
channel spacing limits in SSB-based wireless MRI receiver
arrays
Matthew J Riffe1, Natalia Gudino1,
Michael D Twieg2, Jeremy A Heilman3,
and Mark A Griswold1,4
1Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States, 2Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States, 3Quality
Electrodynamics (QED), Mayfield Village, Ohio, United
States, 4Radiology,
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United
States
Ideally in SSB-based wireless MRI, the frequency spacing
between encoded signals is limited by the bandwidth of
the MR acquisition. This would allow for a very dense
wireless transmission spectrum, which is necessary when
transmitting all the signals present in highly parallel
detector arrays. Unfortunately, this dense spacing only
works if the noise outside the MRI signal bandwidth does
not impact the other multiplexed signals. In this work,
we show that this interference can have a substantial
impact and must be considered during design. We
demonstrate this by constructing an eight channel
wireless head array for 1.5T.
|
15:06 |
0436. |
Superconducting
Receive-only 7 Tesla Coil for High Resolution Rat Brain DTI
permission withheld
Jarek Wosik1,2, Kurt H Bockhorst3,
Tan I-Chih4, and Ponnada A Narayana3
1Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of Houston, Houston, Texas, United States, 2Texas
Center for Superconductivity, 3Department
of Radiology, University of Texas Health Science Center,
Houston, Texas, United States, 4The
Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine, The
University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston,
Texas 77030, United States
We report on the recent development and improvements of
a 300-MHz cryogenic (both copper and superconducting)
coil for high resolution MRI. The coil comprises of two
split rings rotated 180 deg. versus each other and has
built-in gold contacts for attaching coupling/matching
and detuning circuitry. The coil was fabricated by
patterning double-sided thin film on 0.33 mm sapphire
substrate (ε=10.4). SNR gains of 77K copper and YBCO
coils were measured and compared with theoretical
predictions and calculations. SNR/resolution limits of
the HTS coil are currently tested for DTI of rat brain
and also for 3 D imaging of sciatic mouse nerve.
|
15:18 |
0437. |
A 12-element Receive Coil
Array for the Rat Brain at 11.7T
Stephen Dodd1, Joseph Murphy-Boesch1,
Hellmut Merkle1, Afonso Silva1,
and Alan Koretsky1
1Laboratory of Functional and Molecular
Imaging, NINDS, National Insitutes of Health, Bethesda,
MD, United States
A design for 12-element receive array optimized for the
geometry of the rat brain is presented. The sensitivity
of the array compares favorably with a large surface
coil for the whole rat brain. Representative images
showing the acceleration capabilities and coverage are
shown.
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