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Computer # |
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2916. |
1 |
A referenceless
thermometry using phase differentiation map
Chao Zou1, Huan Shen1,2, Yiu-Cho
Chung1, Mengyue He1, Yingjiang Liu3,
Bin Fu3, Yi Zhang3, and Xin Liu1
1Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology,
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China, 2School
of Information Engineering, Wuhan University of
Technology, Wuhan, Hubei, China, 3National
Engineering Research Center of Ultrasound Medicine,
Chongqing, China
Referenceless thermometry has been proposed to address
the accuracy problem caused by motion artifact and
magnetic field drifting. The prerequisite 2D phase
unwrapping precedure is computationally inefficient. We
proposed a new method based on phase differentiation
estimation to avoid phase unwrapping. Phantom and
ex-vivo studies show that the proposed method is less
sensitive to polynomial order, more computationally
efficient, and its accuracy is comparable to the
standard referenceless method.
|
2917. |
2 |
Multi-Channel Image Ratio
Constrained Reconstruction And Its Application for Highly
Accelerated Temperature Mapping
Feng Huang1, Max Köhler2, Jukka
Tanttu2, Wei Lin1, and George
Randy Duensing1
1Invivo Corporation, Gainesville, FL, United
States, 2Philips
Healthcare, Vantaa, Finland
Image ratio constrained reconstruction (IRCR) is a
generalized version of HYPR (HighlY constrained
PRojection) for highly accelerated dynamic imaging. In
this work, IRCR is extended to combine with parallel
imaging. The multi-channel IRCR is applied to real time
temperature mapping for MR guided HIFU (High Intensity
Focused Ultrasound). Preliminary results for thermometry
data obtained during HIFU sonications in a phantom show
that net reduction factor 4.8 (R = 4.8) can be achieved
with a 3-channel coil. The maximum temperature error was
found to be within 1 °C (RMSE < 0.26°C) at R = 4.8.
|
2918. |
3 |
Compressed Sensing for
Accelerated MR Thermometry in MRI-Controlled Transurethral
Ultrasound Therapy
Patrick Leonard1,2, Rajiv Chopra1,2,
and Adrian Nachman3,4
1Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 2Sunnybrook
Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 3Department
of Electrical Engineering, Universisty of Toronto, 4Department
of Mathematics, Universisty of Toronto
In the current implementation of MRI-controlled
transurethral ultrasound therapy the 3D spatial heating
pattern is approximated by a series of 2D slices
acquired every 5 – 7 seconds. Knowledge of the true 3D
temperature distribution could allow for more
sophisticated temperature control algorithms and improve
the monitoring of nearby tissues for safety. In this
work we examine the use of compressed sensing as a means
of accelerating the data acquisition time, where
preserving the quantitative accuracy of the temperature
measurements is critical. Our results show that our
treatment remains safe and effective at up to 32-fold
acceleration rates.
|
2919. |
4 |
Localization of Kalman
Filtered Temperature Imaging for MR-guided Thermal Ablations
Joshua P. Yung1,2, David Fuentes1,
John D. Hazle1,2, Jeffrey S. Weinberg3,
and R. Jason Stafford1,2
1Department of Imaging Physics, The
University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center,
Houston, TX, United States, 2The
University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical
Sciences, Houston, TX, United States, 3Department
of Neurosurgery, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center, Houston, TX, United States
Synopsis. Minimally-invasive MR-guided thermal therapies
have been combined with model-based filters to improve
precision and robustness of MR thermometry. When using a
model, such as the bioheat transfer equation, to provide
temperature estimate predictions, the propagation of the
covariance matrix becomes computationally intensive. In
this work, a characterization study was performed to
investigate the effect of localization and model error
covariance in order to provide a reduction in
computational complexity while in the presence of
simulated artifacts. Dice similarity coefficient and RMS
error was used to evaluate the temperature model-based
Kalman filter temperature estimates with MRTI and
post-treatment imaging.
|
2920. |
5 |
MR ARFI using the Keyhole
technique: Acceleration of MR-guided adaptive focusing for
transcranial ultrasonic brain therapy
Raphaël Paquin1,2, Alexandre Vignaud3,
Laurent Marsac4,5, Youliana Younan4,
Stéphane Lehéricy1,6, Mickaël Tanter4,
and Jean-François Aubry4
1CENIR - Centre de NeuroImagerie de
Recherche, ICM - Institut du Cerveau et de la Moelle
épinière, Paris, France, 2CRICM,
Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris 6)/INSERM
UMR_S975/CNRS UMR 7225, Paris, France, 3Siemens
Healthcare, F-93527 St Denis 2, France, 4Institut
Langevin, ESPCI ParisTech, CNRS UMR 7587, INSERM U979,
Paris, France, 5SuperSonic
Imagine, Aix en Provence, France, 6Groupe
Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France
Magnetic resonance acoustic radiation force imaging (MR
ARFI) provides a quantitative measurement of tissue
displacement induced by the acoustic radiation force.
Adaptive focusing of transcranial HIFU beams requires a
large number of MR ARFI images and thus calls for fast
imaging techniques. This work proposes to combine a
two-dimensional spin-warp MR ARFI pulse sequence with
the keyhole technique. Our approach offers a compromise
between spatial resolution, SNR, acquisition speed,
minimal heat deposition, accurate localization of the
focal spot, and could be valuable for adaptive focusing
procedures.
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2921. |
6 |
Validation of 3D Pulse
Sequence for Large Volume Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse
Imaging
Joshua de Bever1, Nick Todd2,
Allison Payne2, Mahamadou Diakite2,
John Hollerbach1, and Dennis Parker2
1School of Computing, University of Utah,
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 2Utah
Center for Advanced Imaging Research, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
A 3-D pulse sequence for providing large coverage
volumetric Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse (ARFI)
imaging is presented. This sequence allows for safe and
easy localization of an ultrasound focal spot in three
dimensions and would be especially beneficial for
verifying targeting accuracy before an MR guided HIFU
treatment.
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2922. |
7 |
Rapid magnetic resonance
imaging of displacement wave propagation introduced by a
transient high intensity focused ultrasound using a gradient
echo sequence
Jiming Zhang1, Pei-Herng Hor1, and
Raja Muthupillai2
1Department of Physics and Texas Center for
Superconductivity, University of Houston, Houston, TX,
United States, 2Diagnostic
and Interventional Radiology, St. Luke's Episcopal
Hospital, Houston, TX, United States
We describe a full field-of-view rapid gradient echo
based technique suitable for magnetic resonance acoustic
radiation force imaging with a 7 s temporal resolution,
and the validation of the method in a gel phantom. The
propagation of the displacement wave emanating from the
ultrasound focus within the phantom material was clearly
captured by the method described. The potential to
measure the displacement wave speed in phantom
experiments may pave way toward estimating phantom
mechanical properties.
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2923. |
8 |
MR-guided acoustic
shielding of the ribs for trans-costal MRgHIFU ablation in
liver
Magalie Viallon1, Lorena Petrusca2,
Vincent Auboiroux2, Denis Morel3,
Arnaud Mueller4, Maria I. Vargas1,
Thomas Goget2, Sylvain Terraz1,
Christoph D. Becker1, and Rares Salomir5
1Radiology Department, Geneva University
Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland, 2Radiology
Department, University of Geneva, 3Anesthesiology
Department, University of Geneva, 4Radiology
Department, HCL, CHU Lyon Sud, Lyon, France, 5Radiology
Department, INSERM Rhone-Alpes, University of Geneva
One of the main challenge for the HIFU therapy in liver
is to prevent the known high risk of collateral heating
and thermal damage in the ribs and ribs-surrounding
tissue. Ribs’ heating during liver MRgHIFU was a major
obstacle for the translation of this technology into a
clinical tool, whereas the size of the population
potentially concerned by such a treatment is very large.
This study investigates a new alternative to solve the
problem of ribs heating, using dedicated MR-guided
positioning of specific reflective strips for acoustic
masking of the ribs.
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2924. |
9 |
Technical Feasibility of
MRI-controlled Interstitial Ultrasound Brain Therapy
William Apoutou N'DJIN1,2, Mathieu BURTNYK1,3,
Nir LIPSMAN4, Michael BRONSKILL1,2,
Michael SCHWARTZ4, Walter KUCHARCZYK3,
and Rajiv CHOPRA1,2
1Imaging Research, Sunnybrook Research
Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada, 2Department
of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto,
ON, Canada, 3Department
of Medical Imaging, University Health Network and the
University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada, 4Division
of Neurosurgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON,
Canada
The feasibility of MRI-guided interstitial ultrasound
therapy in brain was studied in-vivo in a porcine model.
After the insertion of the therapeutic applicator into
the brain, ultrasound heating was performed under MR-thermometry
control in 5 animals. The procedure was well tolerated.
This minimally-invasive approach allowed large and fast
brain tissue ablations (~ 7 cm3 in less than 10 min )
with high spatial control of the heating (accuracy ~2
mm). Future investigations will focus on the targeting
of specific brain structures/tumors and on the control
in 3D of the heat deposition, with several applications
for tissue ablation or drug delivery.
|
2925. |
10 |
Investigations on
ultrasound focal therapy for MRI-Guided transurethral
treatment of the prostate: dual-frequency ultrasound heating
in gel phantom
William Apoutou N'DJIN1,2, Charles MOUGENOT3,
Ilya KOBELEVSKIY1, Elizabeth RAMSAY1,
Michael BRONSKILL1,2, and Rajiv CHOPRA1,2
1Imaging Research, Sunnybrook Research
Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada, 2Department
of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto,
ON, Canada, 3Philips
Healthcare, Toronto, ON, Canada
The feasibility of transurethral dual-frequency
ultrasound focal therapy under MR-thermometry guidance
has been investigated experimentally in gel phantom. The
therapeutic applicator was inserted into an anatomical
gel phantom including clinically approved human prostate
geometry and prostate tumor mimics. Full prostate gland
therapy and focal therapy strategies have been tested
successfully, and allowed accurate and fast treatments
(~ half an hour) of all tumor mimics spread in a large
prostate (52 cm2). Focal therapy was faster and less
aggressive, which can be promising for future clinical
studies on MR-guided transurethral ultrasound treatment
of localized prostate cancer.
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2926. |
11 |
Simulation of temperature
distribution in the pelvic tissues during radical
prostatectomy with insertion of an endorectal cooling
balloon
Yuting Lin1, Jeon-Hor Chen1,2,
Wei-Chin Lin2, Peter T Fwu1,
Tzu-Ching Shih2,3, Orhan Nalcioglu1,
and Min-Ying L Su1
1Tu and Yuen Center for Functional
Onco-Imaging, Department of Radiological Science,
University of California, IRVINE, California, United
States,2Department of Radiology, China
Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan, 3Biomedical
Imaging and Radiological Science, China Medical
University, Taichung, Taiwan
Hypothermic cooling via an endorectal balloon (ECB) has
been shown to significantly reduce long term urinary
incontinence and sexual dysfunction in men after robotic
radical prostatectomy. Currently, there is no treatment
planning tool for ECB design to optimize the balloon
temperature and application time to ensure effective
nerve-sparing cooling. In this study, we established a
simulation model to map the temperature distribution
based on the MR images of each individual patient. This
proof of principle study demonstrated that this
simulation tool can potentially be used for MR-image
guided treatment planning to achieve optimized ECB
cooling for nerve sparing.
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2927. |
12 |
Unexpected Heating of
MR-compatible Cyroablation Probes Using a Conventional 1.5T
MR Scanner
Dara L Kraitchman1,2, Di Qian1,3,
Paul A Bottomley1, and Clifford R Weiss1
1Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology,
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Department
of Molecular and Comparative Pathobiology, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Department
of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD, United States
MR-compatible cryoablation therapy was originally
developed on low field systems to treat cancer.
Ancedoctal evidence suggests that heating of the
cryoprobes may occur. Using a realistic whole body
phantom that approximates human body conductivity, we
determined the specific absorption rate (SAR) of a
clinical approved cryoablation system using fiber optic
probes on a 1.5 T MR system. A standard cardiac
multislice cine SSFP sequence achieved peak SAR levels
of 5.4. Using a real-time SSFP sequence, transient
heating changes exceeding 15°C were noted. These results
should be taken into account during MR-guided
cryoablation procedures.
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2928. |
13 |
MRI appearance of
time-separated RF ablation lesions
Andriy Shmatukha1, Xiuling Qi2,
Sudip Ghate2, Jennifer Barry2,
Graham Wright2, and Eugene Crystal2
1Cardiac and Interventional Applied Science
Laboratory, General Electric Healthcare, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada, 2Sunnybrook
Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Intra-operative MRI visualization of RF ablation lesions
has the potential to make cardiac electrophysiology (EP)
procedures more safe and efficient. Previous studies
investigated MRI visualization aspects of
quasi-simultaneous lesions created few minutes apart.
However, in many clinical EP procedures lesions can be
separated in time by dozens of minutes, which could
potentially result in different lesion appearances on MR
images acquired after multiple lesion applications. This
works proves experimentally that RF ablation lesions
separated by up to 45 minutes can be successfully
visualized by the main MRI techniques and appear similar
on the resulting images.
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2929. |
14 |
Application of blood pool
contrast agent to visualize atrial lesion formation during
RF ablation procedure
Eugene G. Kholmovski1,2, Sathya Vijayakumar1,2,
Ravi Ranjan2,3, Josh Blauer2,4,
Nelly Volland1,2, Gene Payne1,2,
Michael Guttman5, Pete Piferi5,
Chris J. McGann2,3, and Nassir F. Marrouche2,3
1UCAIR, Department of Radiology, University
of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 2CARMA
Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United
States, 3Department
of Cardiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah,
United States, 4Department
of Bioengineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City,
Utah, United States, 5MRI
Interventions Inc., Irvine, California, United States
Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) MRI can be used to
assess extent of the left atrial wall injury and
validate tissue destruction during RF ablation procedure
for treatment of atrial fibrillation. However,
conventional contrast agents have fast clearance times
making them less useful in the settings when LGE-MRI
should be performed multiple times during interventional
procedure. Blood pool contrast agents have noticeably
longer clearance times. However, these agents have not
been tested as contrast agents for LGE-MRI of acute
atrial lesions. In this study, we examine applicability
of blood pool contrast agent to visualize acute atrial
lesions.
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2930. |
15 |
High Temporal Resolution
Monitoring of Contact Between Catheter Tip and Target Tissue
During a Real-Time-MRI-Guided Ablation using a 2D RF
Navigator
Ashvin K George1, Eugene G Kholmovski1,
and Nassir F Marrouche1
1CARMA Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, Utah, United States
We introduce a novel method to monitor the contact made
between the catheter tip and the target tissue during
real-time MRI guided radiofrequency ablation. It is
necessary to ensure that sufficient tip-tissue contact
is made, in order to (a) effectively deliver RF energy
and (b) evaluate the quality of the ablation from the
post-ablation electrogram. Our method uses a pencil beam
navigator positioned through the tip of the catheter
(that is tracked in real-time) and perpendicular to the
heart wall (whose approximate location is known from a
pre-acquired 3D angiography image). We present in vivo
results.
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2931. |
16 |
Catheter Electrogram
Signals in 3T MR Environment
Gene H Payne1,2, Kamal Vij3, Nelly
A Volland1,2, Ravi Ranjan2,4, Rob
MacLeod2,5, and Nassir Marrouche2,4
1UCAIR, University of Utah, Salt Lake City,
UT, United States, 2CARMA
Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United
States, 3MRI
Interventions, Inc., Irvine, CA, United States, 4Department
of Cardiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT,
United States, 5Scientific
Computing and Imaging Institute, University of Utah,
Salt Lake City, UT, United States
During RF ablation procedures for the treatment of
atrial fibrillation, endocardial electrogram signals are
detected, recorded, and displayed for the clinician. A
steerable ablation catheter is used to detect these EGM
signals. With the ultimate goal of performing this
atrial fibrillation treatment inside an MR scanner, it
will be necessary to obtain reliable, low-noise signals
inside the MR scanner. Presented are some details of the
experimental setup that were required to obtain good
electrogram signals on a porcine subject inside a 3T MR
scanner.
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2932. |
17 |
Accuracy of detecting gaps
in atrial RF ablation using LGE MRI
Sathya Vijayakumar1,2, Eugene G Kholmovski1,2,
Ravi Ranjan2,3, Joshua Blauer2,4,
Kamal Vij5, Chris J McGann2,3, and
Nassir F Marrouche2,3
1UCAIR, Dept. of Radiology, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 2CARMA
Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United
States,3Dept. of Cardiology, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 4Scientific
Computing Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City,
Utah, United States, 5MRI
Interventions Inc., Irvine, California, United States
Late Gadolinium Enhancement (LGE) MRI is frequently used
to assess acute injury from RF ablation in the left
atrium. In this work, we strive to determine the
accuracy of the LGE MRI technique used to determine the
gaps between acute lesions to optimize and improve the
real-time MRI guided targeted RF ablation of lesion
gaps.
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2933. |
18 |
In vivo limited
FOV MR thermometry using a local cardiac RF coil in atrial
fibrillation treatment
Nelly A. Volland1,2, Eugene G. Kholmovski1,2,
J. Rock Hadley1, and Dennis L. Parker1,2
1UCAIR/Radiology, University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, Utah, United States, 2CARMA,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Introduction: Feasibility of developing and using local
coil to perform MR thermometry in a beating heart with
high sensitivity was investigated. Methods: Loop coil
was designed and tested in
vivo during
open chest study where MR-compatible RF ablation
catheter was placed inside right ventricle cavity.
Results: High-resolution phase images were acquired in
76.3 ms using segmented EPI pulse sequence. Heating was
observed within seconds of RF energy delivery as
temperature maps were generated with both reference and
referenceless calculation methods. Conclusions: Local
coil was successfully used to perform MR thermometry in
vivo and
justify development of intra-cardiac catheter-mounted
local coils.
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2934. |
19 |
Thermal Conduction from
Coil: Assessment of Effects and Comparison to Simulation
Sukhoon Oh1, Giuseppe Carluccio2,
and Christopher M Collins1
1Center for NMR Research, Radiology, The
Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, PA, United
States, 2Electrical
and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois at
Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States
In this study, we investigate how the thermal conduction
from a transmit surface coil components affects
temperature increase in a subject by comparing
temperature simulations and experiments at two different
coil-sample distances.
|
2935. |
20 |
Respiratory gating of
MRgHIFU treatments in vivo using an optical motion tracking
system
Vincent Auboiroux1, Lorena Petrusca1,
Magalie Viallon2, Denis Morel3,
Arnaud Muller4, Thomas Goget1,
Joerg Roland5, Sylvain Terraz2,
Christoph D Becker2, and Rares Salomir1,2
1Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva,
Geneva, Switzerland, 2Radiology
Department, Geneva University Hospital, Geneva,
Switzerland,3Anesthesiology Department,
Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland, 4MRI
Center, Centre Hospitalier Lyon Sud, Lyon, France, 5Siemens
Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany
An in-bore digital camera was used for the monitoring in
real time of fiducial markers attached to the skin as
direct estimators of the respiratory phase, in the
context of interventional MRI for moving organs. The
detection of the quiet-phase of exhalation based on
in-bore optical acquisition allowed robust triggering of
MR acquisitions (MR-ARFI and MR-thermometry) and HIFU
sonications and yielded accurate ARFI and thermal maps,
without measurable motion-induced artifacts. The
feasibility of this “no touch” approach for the
follow-up of the position in the respiratory cycle was
demonstrated in vivo in sheep kidney and liver
(trans-costal).
|
2936. |
21 |
Recovery of Nanoparticle
Optical Properties Using Magnetic Resonance Temperature
Imaging and Bioheat Transfer Simulation: An Inverse Problem
Approach
Christopher MacLellan1,2, David Fuentes1,
Andrew Elliott1, Jon Schwartz3,
John Hazle1,2, and R. Jason Stafford1,2
1Imaging Physics, UT MD Anderson Cancer
Center, Houston, Texas, United States, 2The
University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical
Sciences at Houston, Houston, Texas, United States, 3Nanospectra
Biosciences, Houston, Texas, United States
Nanoparticles must be well characterized and implemented
into bioheat transfer models for full utilization in
MR-guided laser interstitial thermal therapy (MRgLITT).
We report on an inverse problem approach that recovers
optical properties using the results of bioheat transfer
simulations and MR temperature imaging. Optimized
properties were found to be within 5% of the literature
values for gold nanoshells and nanorods using this
method. This provides a minimally invasive approach that
can determine optical properties of nanoparticle
mixtures without independent simulations of particle
properties.
|
2937. |
22 |
Combination of gradient
echo and chemical shift imaging allows MR thermometry over
long timescales
Ryan J. Larsen1, Curtis L. Johnson2,
Kevin Jackson1, Bradley P. Sutton3,
and John Wang1
1Beckman Institute, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States, 2Mechanical
Science and Engineering, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States, 3Department
of Bioengineering, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States
Water proton resonance frequency shift thermometry over
timescales of 20-60 min can be confounded by field
drift. The field drift can be measured using chemical
shift imaging (CSI), but this technique provides low
temporal and spatial resolution. We demonstrate an
approach that combines a series of gradient echo (GRE)
scans with intermittent CSI scans. The GRE scans provide
high spatial and temporal resolution and the CSI scans
are used to characterize field drift, thereby allowing
measurements to be performed over extended timescales.
|
2938. |
23 |
Generalized polynomial
chaos as a uncertainty quantification method for modeling MR
guided laser induced thermal therapy.
Samuel John Fahrenholtz1,2, David Fuentes1,
John D. Hazle1,2, and Roger Jason Stafford1,2
1Imaging Physics, The University of Texas
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, United
States, 2The
University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical
Science, Houston, Texas, United States
Thermodynamics modeling in the brain could improve the
speed and efficacy of ablative thermal therapies in the
brain. The addition of generalized polynomial chaos to
thermodynamics modeling provides uncertainty
quantification, e.g. a mean and standard deviation for a
predicted treatment temperature. This provides
confidence intervals to the prediction that can be
compared to MR thermal imaging from water proton
frequency shift. This abstract retrospectively compares
MR thermal imaging from a canine brain ablation with a
finite element approach to the Pennes bioheat equation;
uncertainty quantification is provided by generalized
polynomial chaos.
|
2939. |
24 |
Magnetic Stem Cell
Labeling Using Focused Ultrasound
Hulong Lei1, Chao Zou1, Di Pan1,
Norman Beauchamp2, Xiaoming Yang2,
Tom Matula3, and Bensheng Qiu1,2
1Paul C. Lauterbur Research Center for
Biomedical Imaging, Institute of Biomedical and Health
Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen,
Guangdong, China, 2Department
of Radiology, University of Washington School of
Medicine, Seattle, United States, 3Applied
Physics Laboratory, Center for Industrial and Medical
Ultrasound, University of Washington, Seattle, United
States
In this study, an ¡°closed¡± cell labeling system was
designed to reduce contamination and be efficient for
clinical applications, using focused ultrasound, and one
experiment was conducted to validated the feasibility of
the ¡°magnetosonoporation¡± (MSP) cell labeling
apparatus. The results indicated that MSP is an instant,
safe and efficient magnetic cell labeling technique for
non-invasive MRI stem cell tracking in vivo and the
design of MSP apparatus was beneficial to reduce cell
contamination potential and convenient for future
clinical applications.
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Computer # |
|
2940. |
1 |
Intrapericardial Delivery
of Imaging-visible Microencapsulated Mesenchymal Stem Cells
using XFM Guidance
Yingli Fu1, Nicole Azene2, Tina
Ehtiati3, Aaron Flammang3, Wesley
Gilson3, Judy Cook4, Kathleen
Gabrielson2, Clifford Weiss4, Jeff
W Bulte4, Peter V Johnston5, and
Dara L Kraitchman1
1Department of Radiology and Radiological
Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,
United States, 2Molecular
& Comparative Pathobiology, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Siemens
Corporate Research, Baltimore, MD, United States, 4Radiology,
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States, 5Department
of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,
United States
X-ray fused with magnetic resonance imaging (XFM) takes
advantage of both imaging modalities allowing cardiac
function assessments and direct visualization of the
vasculature. XFM guided microencapsulated stem cell
delivery into the pericardium space was safe and would
improve the retention of cellular therapeutics in the
heart.
|
2941. |
2 |
Training and Testing
Environment for MR-guided Vascular Interventions
Martin Alexander Rube1, Efstratios Kokkalis1,2,
Erwin Immel1, Mariana Gueorguieva1,
Roos Eisma3, and Andreas Melzer1
1Institute for Medical Science and
Technology, University of Dundee, Dundee, United
Kingdom, 2Institute
of Cardiovascular Research, Ninewells Hospital and
Medical School, NHS Tayside, Dundee, United Kingdom, 3Centre
for Anatomy and Human Identification, University of
Dundee, Dundee, United Kingdom
A novel interventional training and testing environment
is being developed to facilitate training of new MR
guided vascular interventions as well as testing of
novel devices as guidewires, catheters or implants. The
environment provides appropriate models in anatomically
and clinical relevant conditions with established
pulsatile flow. To demonstrate the principle, a
catheterization of the femoral artery has been performed
with resonant markers for catheter and passive markers
for guidewire localization.
|
2942. |
3 |
Interactive Real Time
Inductively Coupled Catheter Coil Tracking Using a Transmit
Array System
Ugur Yilmaz1,2, Li Pan3, and Ergin
Atalar1,2
1Electrical and Electronics Engineering,
Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey, 2UMRAM,
Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey, 3Siemens
Corporate Research, Center for Applied Medical Imaging,
Baltimore, MD, United States
Inductively coupled catheter coils are advantageous for
interventional procedures, since they require no
connection to MR scanners, which reduces the
difficulties such as device-handling and RF safety
problems faced with active catheters. In our study, we
developed and implemented one way of interactive
real-time inductively coupled catheter coil tracking,
using two transmit channels; from an external computer
on which our interactive real-time software is
installed. The software enables user to change the RF
attributes of transmit channels in real-time so that the
B1 polarization can be altered accordingly which affects
the visualization of inductively coupled catheter.
|
2943. |
4 |
Endovascular Catheter for
Magnetic Navigation under MRI Guidance: Evaluation of
Heating In Vivo at 1.5T
Steven W Hetts1, Maythem Saeed1,
Alastair J Martin1,2, Lee Evans3,
Anthony F Bernhardt3, Vincent Malba3,
Fabio Settecase1, Loi Do1, Sammir
Sullivan1, and Mark W Wilson1
1Radiology, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 2Radiology,
UCSF, 3Microelectronics,
Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Livermore, CA, United
States
Endovascular navigation under MRI guidance can be
facilitated by a catheter with electrical current
carrying microcoils on the tip. Not only do the
microcoils create a visible artifact to allow catheter
tracking, but also they create a small magnetic moment
that attempts to align with the strong B0 magnetic field
of the MR scanner, thus permitting remote controlled
catheter tip deflection. We determined through
histologic analysis the upper boundary of electrical
currents safely usable at 1.5T in a coil-tipped
microcatheter in vivo in swine carotid arteries.
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2944. |
5 |
The Interventional
Loopless Antenna at 7 Tesla
Mehmet Arcan Erturk1,2, AbdEl-Monem M.
El-Sharkawy2, and Paul A. Bottomley1,2
1Electrical & Computer Engineering
Department, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
Maryland, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
Maryland, United States
Recent work with interventional loopless antennae
suggest a near-quadratic gain in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)
with field strength, and potentially safe operation at
higher fields (B 0>1.5T). This work reports
the theoretical and experimental SNR, and initial safety
testing of the first intravascular loopless antenna at
7T. An absolute SNR gain of 5.7 1.5-fold
was realized at 7T vs. 3T: more than 20-fold higher than
at 1.5T. The probe heated <2.0°C during 15min RF
exposure at an applied 4W/kg SAR. The SNR gain offers
the potential for intra-vascular MRI microscopy at <<100 m
resolution, larger fields-of-view (FOV) and/or
high-speed MRI endoscopy.
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2945.
|
6 |
Passive catheter tracking
with a controllable susceptibility effect
William Dominguez-Viqueira1, Hirad Karimi2,
and Charles H Cunningham1,2
1Imaging, Sunnybrook Research Institute,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 2Dept.
of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada
Susceptibility artifact–based tracking using
paramagnetic markers is been used for guiding
endovascular interventions in MRI, but with limited
enthusiasm partly because of the image degradation that
results from such devices. Recently, a
susceptibility-based tracking device which can be
mechanically turned ON and OFF was proposed. In this
work, the device was re-computed for a three-layer
design with widely available materials, scaled down to
3mm (9F) diameter and attached to a catheter to show
feasibility with real-time images. The difference
between the aligned and miss-aligned configurations was
large in the MRI images, showing the feasibility of
tracking the device.
|
2946. |
7 |
A novel algorithm for fast
3D localisation of N fiducial markers from 1D projections
Djordje Brujic1, Francesca Galassi1,
Marc Rea1, and Michael Ristic2
1Imperial College, London, UK, United
Kingdom, 2Imperial
College, London, United Kingdom
We propose an algorithm for localising N fiducial
markers within the imaging volume of the MR scanner to
accurately track devices in real-time. Our algorithm
computes the 3D position of fiducial markers from a set
of 1D projections in space using a novel approach which
improves previous methods. The algorithm was verified
through extensive simulations, implemented and tested
using wireless fiducial markers and a modified FLASH
sequence. We achieved a computational time of 5 ms with
3 fiducial markers, a refresh rate of 10 times/s and a
maximum error of 2.4 mm. Our algorithm is in line with
the requirements of interventional procedures.
|
2947. |
8 |
Robust Computer Assisted
Catheter Tracking Algorithm in MR using Gradient Based
Signatures and Mean Shift Localization
Abubakr El-Tahir1,2, Frederic Courivaud1,
Rafael Palomar1, and Ole Jakob Elle1,2
1The Intervention Centre, Oslo University
Hospital, Oslo, Oslo, Norway, 2Department
of Informatics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Oslo, Norway
A smart robust algorithm for automatic catheter tracking
in MR is proposed. The output of the catheter tracking
is intended to be used in developing an automatic MR
image acquisition and visualization scheme to be
presented to the interventionist during catheterization
procedures. In this method the catheter tip is marked
with an MR traceable marker (in this case a miniature
resonant circuit). Then automatic tip tracking is
performed in a series of MR frames using probability map
generated for each frame based on the similarity to a
pre-learned template marker.
|
2948. |
9 |
MRI-based computational
modeling of flow through a flow-diverting stent
Vitaliy L. Rayz1, Gabriel Acevedo-Bolton1,
Joseph R. Leach2, Petter Dyverfeldt1,
Van Halbach1, and David Saloner1
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University
of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 2University
of California San Francisco, United States
MRI data were used for numerical modeling after
deployment of a flow-diverting stent in a giant cerebral
aneurysm. A patient-specific silicone model of the
aneurysm was constructed from MRA and the stent was
deployed in this phantom. Computations of the flow prior
to and post the procedure were carried out and validated
with 4D PC-MRI measurements. The transport of contrast
through the model was numerically simulated and compared
to DSA cine images acquired during the procedure. The
results indicate that computational models based on MRI
data can be used to evaluate the efficacy of
flow-diverting stents on a patient-specific basis.
|
2949. |
10 |
In vivo Double
Echo MRI Stereoscopy for Real-time 3D Visualization of Blood
Vessels
Alexander Brunner1, Axel Joachim Krafft1,2,
Florian Maier1, Wolfhard Semmler1,
and Michael Bock1,3
1Dept. of Medical Physics in Radiology,
German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg,
Germany, 2Radiological
Sciences, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital,
Memphis, Tennessee, United States, 3Department
of Radiology - Medical Physics, University Hospital
Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
Stereoscopic imaging with two tilted projections
provides a fast alternative to lengthy 3D acquisitions
for the visualisation of vascular structures during
MR-guided vascular interventions. Here, a double-echo
stereoscopy sequence is used in both phantom and animal
experiments, and the quality of the 3D perception is
evaluated.
|
2950. |
11 |
Accurate Localization of
Active Devices using Multi-scale analysis for Interventional
MR Imaging
Julien Barbot1, Steven Shea2,
Klaus Kirchberg1, Kamal Vij3, and
Sunil Patil2
1Center for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens
corporation, Corporate Research, Princeton, NJ, United
States, 2Center
for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens corporation,
Corporate Research, Baltimore, MD, United States, 3MRI
Interventions, Irvine, CA, United States
In order to accurately determine and estimate the
micro-coil position mounted on an interventional device,
a novel multi-scale tracking method is proposed by
considering the projection signal of interest as a
singularity smoothed by a diffusion process. The
parameter estimation is then done by performing edge
detection at different scales and characterizes them to
find suitable patterns for a given projection signal.
The resulting patterns from different scales are
combined to obtain the likelihood estimation at every
position. The benefits over previously proposed methods
are increased robustness, low sensitivity to noise and
the ability to estimate the likelihood information at
every position over the field of view.
|
2951. |
12 |
Contrast-Prepared
Steady-State Free Precession for Visualizing Vascular
Malformation in Intervention
Di Xu1, Liheng Guo1, Aaron J.
Flammang2, Wesley D. Gilson2,
Elliot R. McVeigh1, Jonathan S. Lewin3,
Clifford R. Weiss3, and Daniel A. Herzka1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 2Center
for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens Corporate Research,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Department
of Radiology and Radiologic Science, Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States
Low-flow vascular malformations (VMs) can be treated
with image-guided sclerotherapy. In MR, T2-weighted
fat-saturated imaging is used for visualizing VMs during
the intervention. A contrast-prepared balanced
steady-state free precession (cpSSFP) sequence is
proposed to overcome the limitations of conventional
T2-weighted fat-sat sequences. cpSSFP shows higher CNR
efficiency and superior delineation of small fast moving
structures compared to the current standard HASTE. Two
additional benefits leading to better visualization of
lesions and needles with cpSSFP are tunability of both
T2-weighting and fat-saturation. Motion insensitivity of
such a technique also makes it a logical choice for
free-breathing real-time guidance.
|
2952. |
13 |
Rapid MRI – 4D Image
Guidance for Motion Management in Lung Cancer Radiotherapy
Amit Sawant1, and Sarang Joshi2
1Radiation Oncology, UT Southwestern Medical
Center, Dallas, TX, United States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah,
United States
This work investigates real-time MRI for image-guided
radiation therapy of moving and deforming lung tumors.
We hypothesize that, for the task of lung radiotherapy
guidance, MRI acquisition speed can be increased
significantly at the cost of loss in image SNR. We
present results for scans acquired from two lung cancer
patients on a 1.5T scanner under free-breathing
conditions and without externally administered contrast
using a balanced SSFP sequence. Image acquisition times
of ~6.5 frames/s were achieved for 2D time series and
~0.8 volumes/s for a 3D time series. In each case, the
tumor and structures of interest were clearly
delineated.
|
2953. |
14 |
Accurate real-time
position verification of an Ir-192 source for dynamic
MR-guided single fraction HDR prostate brachytherapy.
Hendrik de Leeuw1, Marinus A Moerland2,
Chris J.G. Bakker1, and Peter R Seevinck1
1Image Sciences Institute, Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands, 2Radiotherapy,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands
High-dose-rate brachytherapy with Iridium-192 can
dramatically improve the efficiency of cancer treatment.
To ensure accurate treatment, in particular for single
fraction therapy, HDR requires independent treatment
verification. CT imaging allows excellent HDR-source
localization, but poor organ visualization and tumour
delineation. Although MRI provides excellent soft tissue
contrast, its geometric accuracy is usually questioned.
Therefore, often CT and MRI are combined. Accurate
MRI-guidance would be extremely useful for
single-fraction HDR brachy-monotherapy. Herein the
feasibility of near real-time Iridium source position
verification using the co-RASOR imaging technique is
demonstrated. The positions on co-RASOR and CT images
are shown to correspond within 1mm.
|
2954. |
15 |
Interactive Interventional
Applications for the MRI Scan Room
Andrew B. Holbrook1, Ronald Watkins1,
and Kim Butts Pauly1
1Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford,
CA, United States
Consumer electronics technology has advanced to create
devices that are less sensitive to the harsh conditions
of a magnet room. We integrated mobile architecture into
our interventional procedures to facilitate imaging
setup and in-room MRI scanning. A single SSID, dual
antenna WiFi network was set up inside both the magnet
room and control room to allow for device connectivity
regardless of location. Applications for MRI control,
physiology monitoring, and HIFU transducer placement
were created and demonstrated on a tablet and a mobile
phone. These applications allow easier monitoring and
control by providing interfaces directly to the
magnet-room user.
|
2955. |
16 |
Augmented Reality
Visualization Using Image-Overlay for MR-guided
Interventions: Shoulder and Hip Arthrography in Cadavers at
1.5 Tesla
Jan Fritz1, Paweena U-Thainual2,3,
Tamas Ungi4, Aaron J Flammang5,
Gabor Fichtinger4, Iulian I Iordachita2,
and John A Carrino1
1Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology
and Radiological Science, The Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Department
of Mechanical Engineering and Laboratory for
Computational Sensing and Robotics, The Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Department
of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Queen's
University, Kingston, ON, Canada, 4School
of Computing, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON, Canada,5Center
for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens Corporate Research,
Princeton, NJ, United States
Augmented reality navigated interventional magnetic
resonance (MR) imaging can help to overcome a
fundamental limitation of MR arthrography, namely the
spatial separation of the two interdependent procedures
of intra-articular injection of a Gadolinium-based
contrast agent and diagnostic MR imaging of the
respective joint. Our study shows that the novel
augmented reality Image-Overlay System provides accurate
and reproducible MR imaging guidance for successful
shoulder and hip arthrography in human cadavers,
supporting further evaluation with clinical trials.
|
2956. |
17 |
Collaborative MRI for
Improving Patient Throughput
Andrew B. Holbrook1, and Kim Butts Pauly1
1Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford,
CA, United States
For diagnostic imaging, a single operator usually sets
up, prescribes, and monitors the MRI scan, with software
designed accordingly. For interventional procedures,
software is still typically designed for a single
operator, despite a team often being present, and
despite long periods of MR inactivity due to required
treatment planning after the initial scans. In this work
we present collaborative MRI, where we demonstrate how
to parallelize user actions to hasten patient workflow.
Our initial work involved designing a software
hub-and-spoke model, such that multiple devices with
unique interfaces connected into the hub to interact
with data and control scans.
|
2957. |
18 |
Robot-Assisted Needle
Alignment with Image-Guided Teleoperated Needle Insertion
for Prostate Cancer Interventions
Gregory Scott Fischer1, Weijian Shang1,
and Hao Su1
1Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester,
MA, United States
Intraoperative high-field MR imaging provides
visualization of critical structures, but the ability to
use that information to guide a surgical intervention is
limited due to physical constraints of operating inside
the scanner bore. For prostate cancer, the gold standard
for diagnosis is biopsy and a common approach to
treatment of localized cancer is brachytherapy seed
placement – both typically performed using an alignment
template. We have developed a robotic assistant that
aligns the biopsy and brachytherapy needle based on
interactive imaging, improving upon standard technique
with greater placement precision and interactively
updated MR imaging. To maintain control while
significantly improving ergonomics, the physician stands
beside the patient viewing real-time MR images aligned
with the scan plane and inserts the needle using an
MR-compatible master device that the robot mimics.
|
2958. |
19 |
Intraoperative MR Image
Guided Endoscopic Surgery on a Closed Bore MR Scanner
Hasnine Haque1,2, Shigehiro Morikawa3,
Shigeyuki Naka2, Hiroyuki Murayama2,
Tohru Tani2, and Tetsuji Tsukamoto1
1Research & Development, GEHC, Hino, Tokyo,
Japan, 2Department
of Surgery, Shiga University of Medical Science, Ohtsu,
Shiga, Japan, 3Biomedical
MR Science Center, Shiga University of Medical Science,
Ohtsu, Shiga, Japan
An endoscope has been used to perform procedures with a
laparoscope or thoracoscope in conventional operating
rooms. One of the problems linked to endoscopic surgery
is its narrow field of view and an inability to view the
clinical target beneath the surface. Therefore, we
propose an integrated environment where surgery can be
performed with MR-compatible flexible endoscope in a
closed bore MR scanner, and have developed a
visualization system to navigate the endoscope by
continuously-acquired near real-time MR images. In this
paper, preliminary results of animal experiment will be
presented.
|
2959. |
20 |
Minimally Invasive
Intracranial Robot (MINIR)
Rao P Gullapalli1, Michael Kolz2,
Mingyen Ho3, George Makris1, Alan
B McMillan1, Marc Simard2, and
Jaydev P Desai3
1Magnetic Resonance Research Center,
Department of Diagnostic Radiology & Nuclear Medicine,
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore,
MD, United States, 2Department
of Neurosurgery, University of Maryland School of
Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Department
of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maryland
College Park, College Park, MD, United States
The development of a multi-digited minimally invasive
intracranial robot (MINIR) that can be deployed through
a narrow ‘corridor’ to approach and resect a tumor, and
capable of operating outside the ‘line-of-sight’ under
continuous MR imaging guidance is described. The robot
was tested on phantoms and on pig brains for its
maneuverability, and to study the effect of the robot on
the signal to noise, and geometric distortion during
imaging both with and without activation. The multiple
digits of the robot were clearly visible under MR and
the images exhibited minimal signal to noise degradation
and image distortion.
|
2960. |
21 |
Geometrical distortion
rectification using image stitching in open MRI
Cheolpyo Hong1, Teaho Kim2,
Donghoon Lee1, Manwoo Lee3, and
Bongsoo Han1
1Department of Radiological Science, Yonsei
Univ., Wonju, Gangwon-do, Korea, 2Radiation
Physics Laboratory, The University of Sydney, Sydney,
Australia,3Genpia Co., Wonju, Gangwon-do,
Korea
The primary advantage of magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) in radiotherapy is its excellent soft tissue
contrast. The accuracy of the tumor volume delineation
can be improved using MRI in combination with CT during
treatment planning. Recently, open-type MR systems have
become attractive for image-guided radiotherapy due to
their easy patient access configuration. However,
geometric image distortion by imaging gradient
nonlinearity hinders the practical applications of MRI
in radiotherapy. In this study, we propose an image
stitching algorithm to merge non-distorted images
obtained at the isocenter of the magnet and demonstrate
an extended field of view using the proposed geometric
distortion correction technique.
|
2961. |
22 |
Efficacy and Safety of
Pediatric MR-guided Musculoskeletal Interventions: A
Multicenter Analysis of 200 cases
Jan Fritz1,2, Roberto B Sequeiros3,
Serban Mateiescu4, John A Carrino1,
Risto Ojala3, Dietrich Grönemeyer4,
and Philippe L Pereira2,5
1Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology
and Radiological Science, The Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Diagnostic
and Interventional Radiology, Eberhard-Karls University
Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany, 3Department
of Radiology, Oulu University Hospital, Oulu, Finland,4Department
of Radiology and Microtherapy, University of Witten/Herdecke,
Bochum, Germany, 5Deptartment
of Radiology, SLK-Kliniken Heilbronn, Germany
Musculoskeletal pediatric interventions are frequently
performed under X-ray fluoroscopy and computed
tomography guidance, but the procedure-related exposure
to ionizing radiation raises health concerns. Because of
the absence of ionizing radiation, interventional
magnetic resonance (MR) imaging superbly complies with
the ALARA practice mandate, however very little data
exist about the efficacy and safety of pediatric MR-guided
musculoskeletal procedures. Our data show that a wide
variety of pediatric MR imaging-guided percutaneous
musculoskeletal diagnostic and therapeutic procedures
can be efficaciously performed and are safe for use in
clinical practice mandating more vigilant implementation
of the ALARA practice mandate in selected pediatric
musculoskeletal interventions.
|
2962. |
23 |
MR Neurography-guided
Percutaneous Pelvic Injection Procedures
Jan Fritz1, Yubo Lü1, Kenneth C
Wang1, Paweena U-Thainual2,3,
Aaron J Flammang4, Avneesh Chhabra1,
and John A Carrino1
1Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology
and Radiological Science, The Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Department
of Mechanical Engineering and Laboratory for
Computational Sensing and Robotics, The Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Department
of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Queen's
University, Kingston, ON, Canada, 4Center
for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens Corporate Research,
Princeton, NJ, United States
In pelvic pain syndromes, selective nerve infiltration
with a local anesthetic is used to test the hypothesis
that a particular nerve is the source of pain.
Diagnostic blocks require highest accuracy because they
are typically used as a tool to help to make advanced
management decisions such as surgery. MR neurography-guided
injection procedures can increase accuracy especially in
deeply situated and complex targets by the direct MR
visualization of the nerve and the injectant.
|
2963. |
24 |
MR-guided Interventions of
the Musculoskeletal System in Children and Adults: Pertinent
Principles and Spectrum of Clinical Applications
Jan Fritz1, Roberto B Sequeiros2,
Yubo Lü1, Paweena U-Thainual3,4,
Aaron J Flammang5, Avneesh Chhabra1,
Philippe L Pereira6, and John A Carrino1
1Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology
and Radiological Science, The Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, Oulu University Hospital, Oulu, Finland, 3Department
of Mechanical Engineering and Laboratory for
Computational Sensing and Robotics, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD, United States, 4Department
of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Queen's
University, Kingston, ON, Canada,5Center for
Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens Corporate Research,
Princeton, NJ, United States, 6Deptartment
of Radiology, SLK-Kliniken Heilbronn, Heilbronn, Germany
Different concepts of combined clinical and
interventional MR imaging expanded the spectrum of
musculoskeletal interventional MR imaging into
clinically useful procedures in children and adults. In
this exhibit, we review the pertinent principles,
indications, advantages, and drawbacks of interventional
MR imaging relevant to musculoskeletal procedures.
Minimally invasive, MR-guided techniques of percutaneous
procedures are taught through illustrative case
examples, including diagnostic osseous biopsy,
therapeutic osseous interventions such as drill-assisted
resection, soft tissue biopsy, preoperative percutaneous
tumor marking, and injection procedures including
selective nerve injections, epidural injections, facet
joint injections, sacroiliac joint injections,
discography, sympathetic blocks, and temporomandibular
joint injections.
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