Traditional
Poster Session - Interventional |
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Thermotherapy & Thermometry
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the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 15:30 |
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1556.
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Towards real-time
availability of 3-D temperature maps created with temporally
constrained reconstruction
Nick Todd1, Jaya Prakash2, Henrik
Odeen3, Josh de Bever4, Allison
Payne1, Phaneendra Yalavarthy2,
and Dennis L. Parker1
1Radiology/UCAIR, University of Utah, Salt
Lake CIty, UT, United States, 2Supercomputer
Education and Research Centre, Indian Institute of
Science, India, 3Physics,
University of Utah, Salt Lake CIty, UT, United States, 4Computer
Science, University of Utah, Salt Lake CIty, UT, United
States
Large coverage 3-D temperature maps are desirable for
many thermal therapy applications. Constrained
reconstruction algorithms that create images from
undersampled k-space data have been shown capable of
providing such maps with the necessary spatial and
temporal resolution. However, a large computation burden
and batch reconstruction prevent the images from being
available in real-time. This work attempts to overcome
these challenges by developing a real-time temporally
constrained reconstruction algorithm, with the goal of
providing large volume 3-D temperature maps with less
than 1 second latency.
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1557. |
Super-resolution for
real-time volumetric MR temperature imaging
Baudouin Denis de Senneville1,2, Silke Hey2,3,
Chrit Moonen1,2, and Mario Ries1,2
1Imaging Division, UMC Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands, 2CNRS
/ University of Bordeaux 2, IMF, Bordeaux, France, 3Philips
Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
MR-Thermometry for the guidance of HIFU interventions on
moving organs should preferably have a high spatio-temporal
resolution and volumetric coverage to allow observing
the temperature with a high precision. This study
investigates the possibility to perform motion
compensated volumetric MR-thermometry with help of a
reconstruction using a Super-resolution algorithm. This
allows to deal with in-plane motion in image space first
and to subsequently reduce the slice thickness towards
an isotropic resolution. This I improves the accuracy of
MR-thermometry due to the reduced partial volume effect.
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1558. |
Kalman Filtering for
undersampeled continuous volumetric MR-Temperature Imaging
Baudouin Denis de Senneville1,2, Sébastien
Roujol2,3, Silke Hey2,4, Chrit
Moonen1,2, and Mario Ries1,2
1Imaging Division, UMC Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands, 2CNRS
/ University of Bordeaux 2, IMF, Bordeaux, France, 3Cardiovascular
Division, Beth Israel Deaconess, Medical Center, Harvard
Medical School, Boston, United States, 4Philips
Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
Volumetric real time MR-thermometry on moving organs for
therapy guidance is challenging. As a result, recent
efforts focused on the possibility to exploit the
physical knowledge of the heating process for the
artefact free reconstruction of 3D MR-temperature maps
from under-sampled MR-data. This study investigates the
possibility to reconstruct continuous volumetric
temperature data from spatio-temporally under-sampled 3D
MR-temperature maps using an Extended Kalman Filter with
the bio-heat transfer equation as the model predictor.
The proposed method was characterized with in-vivo HIFU
experiments on porcine kidney.
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1559. |
A Computationally
Efficient Real-Time Hybrid MR Thermometry for MRI-guided RF
Ablation
Peng Wang1, Madhav Venkateswaran2,
Krishna Kurpad3, and Orhan Unal1
1Medical Physics, University of Wisconsin -
Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States, 2Electrical
and Computer Engineering, University of Wisconsin -
Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States, 3Radiology,
University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, Wisconsin,
United States
Proton resonance frequency (PRF) shift-based MR
thermometry provides a non-invasive temperature mapping
method for monitoring the progress of RF ablation
therapies. Multi-baseline and referenceless methods have
been used to address the complications caused by motion
in standard PRF method. In this work, we present a
computationally efficient and simplified real-time
hybrid (multi-baseline + referenceless) MR thermometry
technique for monitoring MR-guided thermal therapies.
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1560. |
Real-Time Interleaved
Temperature and ADC Measurements For Early Assessment of
Tissue Viability during Prostate Thermal Therapies
Juan Camilo Plata1, Andrew Holbrook1,
Punit Prakash2, Vasant Salgaonkar2,
Peter Jones2, Chris Diederich2,
Graham Sommer1, and Kim Butts Pauly1
1Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United
States, 2University
of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United
States
Monitoring tissue viability during thermal therapies is
critical for assessing treatment progress and safety.
Temperature and thermal dose measurements do not provide
physiological response information and hence are
indirect measurements of tissue viability. Diffusion
weighted MRI (DWI) has been used to assess tissue
viability following thermal treatment of the prostate.
Following treatment, dead tissue presents a 36%
reduction in the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC).
We obtained interleaved ADC and temperature measurements
in order to determine the onset of the 36% reduction and
whether it can be used as an indicator of tissue
necrosis.
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1561. |
An Integrated System for
MR-Guided Thermal Ablations: From Planning to Real-Time
Temperature Monitoring
Eva Rothgang1,2, Wesley D. Gilson2,3,
Li Pan2,3, Jörg Roland4, Klaus J.
Kirchberg2, Frank Wacker3,5,
Joachim Hornegger1, and Christine H. Lorenz2,3
1Pattern Recognition Lab, Department of
Computer Science, Friedrich-Alexander University,
Erlangen, Germany, 2Center
for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens Corporate Research,
Baltimore, Maryland, United States, 3Russell
H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological
Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland,
United States, 4Siemens
Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany, 5Department
of Radiology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany
MR-guided thermal ablations are still primarily
performed at tertiary care centers due to the complex
workflow. We present a fully integrated system
supporting the key workflow steps planning, targeting,
and monitoring. Real-time, multi-slice pulse sequences
are combined with image-based methods for advanced
planning, intelligent automatic slice alignment and
enhanced thermal mapping.
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1562. |
Proton Density Ratio
Consideration in Optimizing Image Processing in Fat-Water
Thermometry using Methylene T1 and Water Resonance Frequency
Kagayaki Kuroda1,2, Yuta Takano1,
Makoto Obara3, Paul Baron4, Lam
Mie Kee4, Wilbert L Bartels4,
Honda Masatoshi3, and Yutaka Imai5
1School of Information Science and
Technology, Tokai University, Hiratsuka, Kanagawa,
Japan, 2Department
of Research and Development, Foundation for Kobe
International Medical Alliance, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan, 3MR
Marketing, Philips Electronics Japan Medical Systems,
Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan, 4Image
Sciences Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht, Netherlands, 5Department
of Radiology, Tokai University, Japan
Density ratios among the nine fat proton components were
measured for optimizing image processing in fat-water
thermometry based on methylene T1 and water proton
resonance frequency. The results suggested that the
relative ratios among the components were mostly
temperature independent suggesting that the component
ratios can be fixed in the fat signal estimation in
temperature imaging.
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1563. |
Simultaneous Temperature
Mapping in Fat and Water using Two Point Dixon Hybrid PRF-T1
in 3D segmented Flyback EPI
Mahamadou Diakite1, Henrik Odeen1,
Nick Todd2, and Dennis L. Parker2
1University of Utah, Physics and Astronomy,
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 2Radiology,
Utah Center of Advanced Imaging Research (UCAIR), Salt
Lake City, Utah, United States
Accurate temperature mapping in tumor and surrounding
tissue throughout a thermal therapy procedure is
essential to ensure the safety and efficacy of the
treatment. Methods based on the temperature dependency
of the water proton resonance frequency (PRF) shift have
shown the best ability to quantify temperature rises in
aqueous tissues. Unfortunately, the PRF shift with
temperature does not apply to lipid protons, since there
is no hydrogen bonding among the methylene protons that
supply the bulk of the fat signal. However, the
temperature sensitivity of the spin-lattice relaxation
time, T1, has been measured for a number of fatty
tissues, and was found to obey a linear relationship
with the temperature [1]. In the present work, we show a
sequence implementation for 3D fat and water temperature
imaging based on a Two Point Dixon (2PD) fat and water
separation and the Variable Flip Angle (VFA) T1 mapping
techniques [2].
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1564. |
Assessment of Tissue
Damage using PRF-T1 Technique
Mahamadou Diakite1, Allison Payne2,
Nick Todd2, and Dennis L. Parker2
1Physics and Astronomy, University of Utah,
Salt lake, Utah, United States, 2Radiology,
Utah Center of Advanced Imaging Research (UCAIR), Salt
Lake City, Utah, United States
One of the main reasons focused ultrasound surgery has
not been used widely in the clinical setting has been
the difficulty to assess the extent of biological tissue
damage due to hyperthermia. Denaturation of
macromolecules within the tissues is believed to be the
major factor contributing to the damage of tissues upon
hyperthermia. Water in biological tissues is mostly
bound to macromolecules such as: protein, fibers,
membranes, and ions. As a result, the values of the
relaxation time (T1) of the tissue water, which are
related to the translational and rotational rates of
water, represent the intrinsic probes for investigating
the structural changes in the tissues at high
temperature. It has been also shown that methods based
on the temperature dependency of the water proton
resonance frequency (PRF) shift has the best ability to
quantify temperature rises in soft tissues [1].
Therefore, the goal of the present study is to
investigate whether the hybrid technique (PRF-T1), can
be used to quantify the threshold of tissue damage.
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1565. |
MR Safety: Fast T1
Thermometry of the RF-Induced Heating of Medical Devices
Daniel Gensler1, Florian Fidler1,
Philipp Ehses1, Marcus Warmuth2,
Theresa Reiter2, Markus Düring3,4,
Oliver Ritter2, Mark E Ladd5,
Harald H Quick6, Peter M Jakob1,3,
Wolfgang R Bauer2, and Peter Nordbeck2
1Research Center Magnetic-Resonance-Bavaria,
Würzburg, Germany, 2Department
of Internal Medicine I - Cardiology, University Hospital
Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany,3Experimental
Physics 5, University Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany, 4Noras
MRI Products GmbH, Höchberg, Germany, 5Erwin
L. Hahn Institute for Magnetic Resonance Imaging,
University Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany, 6Institute
for Medical Physics, University Erlangen-Nürnberg,
Erlangen, Germany
Determining the MR compatibility of medical implants is
becoming increasingly relevant. In most cases, the
RF-heating of implants is measured by fluoroptic probes,
but these can only measure the temperature at a single
point. Another method to determine heating effects is
MR-thermometry using the PRFS which gives good results
in homogeneous phantoms. However, in several cases the
inhomogeneity of organic tissue and susceptibility
changes near an implant prohibits PRFS-thermometry. The
intention of this work was to develop a fast T1-based
thermometry method which allows controlled MR-related
heating of a medical implant while simultaneously
quantifying the spatial and temporal temperature
distribution.
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1566. |
DWI based thermometry:
Analysis method and its applications
Koji Sakai1, Kei Yamada2, Kentaro
Akazawa2, and Naozo Sugimoto3
1Kyoto University, Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan, 2Kyoto
Prefectural University of Medicine, 3Kyoto
University
Among MR methods, the most clinically applicable
assessing-the-brain-temperature method could be the post
processing of the DWI. Although only applicable to the
non-restricted water, it is thought to be potentially
useful in assessing the thermal pathophysiology of the
brain. The purpose of this study was to develop new
calculation method, which does not require user
depending threshold. The mean ventricular temperature of
23 healthy subjects (aged 26-75 years) were calculated
by four methods: two thresholding methods and two
histogram curve-fitting methods. The histogram
curve-fitting methods seemed to yield more appropriate
temperatures, using tympanic temperature as a reference.
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1567. |
Fat Referenced Volumetric
MR Thermometry Using 2 point Dixon and Alternating EPI Read
Out Directions
Henrik Odéen1,2, Mahamadou Diakite1,2,
Nick Todd2, and Dennis L Parker2
1Department of Physics, University of Utah,
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 2UCAIR,
Department of Radiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, Utah, United States
A 3D Segmented EPI pulse sequence where the polarity of
the read out train changes from measurement to
measurement is used in conjunction with 2 point Dixon
fat/water-separation and Temporally Constrained
Reconstruction to achieve N/2 ghost-free fat-only and
water-only images. The phase of the fat-only images is
used to create a spatially varying least square second
order fit to create corrected 3D temperature maps of the
water in a water/oil phantom using the PRF method. The
RMS error in a cooling experiment decreased from 4.0°C
to 2.5°C over 265 seconds of cooling from 70°C to 45°C.
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1568. |
Fat-Referenced MR
Thermometry during Canine Prostate Ablation
Lorne Hofstetter1, Hadas Ziso2,
Yoav Levy2, Yuval Zur3, Giora Sat3,
W Thomas Dixon1, Yoav Medan2,
Cynthia Davis1, Thomas K Foo1, and
Desmond Yeo1
1GE Global Research, Niskayuna, New York,
United States, 2InSightec,
Tirat Carmel, Israel, 3GE
Healthcare, Tirat Carmel, Israel
In this work, we test a newly developed fat-referenced
thermometry technique during a canine prostate ablation
procedure. The fat-referenced method was compared with
the conventional and drift-corrected proton resonance
frequency shift (PRFS) thermometry techniques. Over the
83 minute thermal monitor period, the fat-referenced
method corrected for time-varying B0 field disturbances
in the prostate region.
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Traditional
Poster Session - Interventional |
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MR-Guided Focused Ultrasound
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 15:30 |
|
|
1569. |
Different Indication of
FLAIR, Contrast-Enhanced, and MTR Images on Tissues Ablated
by High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound
Shih-Chieh Lin1, Teng-Yi Huang2,
Wen-Shiang Chen3, Jyun-Ming Tsai2,
Meng-Ju Wang3, Wen-Yih Isaac Tseng4,
and Hsu-Hsia Peng1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering and
Environmental Sciences, National Tsing Hua Univisity,
Hsinchu, Taiwan, 2Department
of Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan University of
Science and Technology, Taipei, Taiwan, 3Department
of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, National Taiwan
University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan, 4Center
for Optoelectronic Biomedicine, Medical College of
National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan
Evaluation of longitudinal tissue property alterations
following HIFU ablation is important in the monitoring
of therapeutic effects. Our previous studies, presented
a designed pulse sequence which can evaluate temperature
and MT effect simultaneously during HIFU transmission,
have been performed on ex-vivo porcine muscle studies
and in-vivo rabbit thigh muscle studies. In this study,
we aim to compare the complimentary information of
ablated regions provided by MT effect and routine
images. The FLAIR images, T1-weighted contrast-enhanced
images, and MT-weighted images are acquired in long-term
follow-up experimental design. Different indication of
above three kinds of image contrast is demonstrated in
this study.
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1570. |
Evaluation of PRFS MR
Thermometry in the Human Prostate Gland at 3.0T for
Transurethral Ultrasound Therapy
Elizabeth Ramsay1, Charles Mougenot2,
Max Kohler2, Michael Bronskill3,
Laurence Klotz4, Masoom Haider5,
and Rajiv Chopra1,3
1Imaging Research, Sunnybrook Health Sciences
Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 2Philips
Healthcare, 3Department
of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto,4Department
of Urology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, 5Medical
Imaging, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
A segmented gradient echo EPI sequence as applied to PRF
shift thermometry was evaluated in healthy human
volunteers at 3T in order to determine its feasibility
for MRI-controlled transurethral prostate therapy. TE
values of 7-25ms, EPI factors of 5-17 and voxel sizes
from 1.14mm to 2.0mm were tested. For all scan
parameters and for all volunteers, the temperature
standard deviation within the prostate was less than 1oC,
while the spatial distortion was less than 1mm.
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1571. |
Magnetic-Resonance
Analysis of Dynamic Permeability Change in
Focused-Ultrasound Induced Blood-Brain Barrier Disruption in
Small Animals
Wen-Yen Chai1,2, Po-Chun Chu2,
Yu-Chun Lin1, Jiun-Jie Wang3,
Yau-Yau Wai1, Tzu-Chen Yen4, and
Hao-Li Liu2
1Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Chang
Gung Memorial Hospital Linkou, Taoyuan, Taiwan, 2Department
of Electrical Engineering, Chang-Gung University,
Taoyuan, Taiwan, 3Department
of Medical Image and Radiological Sciences, Chang-Gung
University, 4Chang
Gung Memorial Hospital Linkou, Taoyuan, Taiwan
Microbubble-enhanced burst-mode focused ultrasound (FUS)
can disrupt the blood-brain barrier (BBB), and only
sustained for a limited duration (usually a few hours).
Two DSC-MRI were acquired at 10/150 mins after
sonication to generate two permeability maps Ktrans/ Ve.
The mean values of Ktrans/ Ve. at 150 mins. were
obviously decrease 60% /64% when compared with 10 mins.
This implies the local permeability change induced from
FUS-induced BBB-disruption were highly dynamic.
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1572. |
In-vivo Temporal
Characterization of Focal Openings of the Blood-Brain
Barrier Using MR guided Focused Ultrasound
Andreia Silva1,2, Angelika Hoffmann1,
Alexander Klibanov1, Max Wintermark1,
Sara Reis1, John Mugler III1, and
Jaime Mata1
1Radiology & Medical Imaging, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, United States, 2IBEB
-FCUL, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal
The use of contrast agents and therapeutic agents in the
brain is limited by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which
restricts their entry into the brain. Focal or regional
opening of the BBB in a non-invasive and controlled way
may provide the administration of specifically targeted
therapeutic agents to a localized area. The purpose of
this work was to characterize the opening of the BBB
temporally, during the 60 minutes immediately post-sonication
with microbubbles; this is important to determine the
optimal time window to administer intra-venous brain
therapeutic agents.
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1573. |
Quantitative
Magnetic-Resonance Pharmacodynamic Analysis of Transcranial
Focused-Ultrasound Induced Blood-Brain Barrier Disruption in
Small Animal
Po-Chun Chu1, Wen-Yen Chai1,2,
Jiun-Jie Wang3, Tzu-Chen Yen4, and
Hao-Li Liu1
1Department of Electrical Engineering,
Chang-Gung University, Taoyuan, Taiwan, Taiwan, 2Department
of Diagnostic Radiology, Chang-Gung University and
Memorial Hospital, Linkou, Taiwan, Taiwan, 3Department
of Medical Image and Radiological Sciences, Chang-Gung
University, Taoyuan, Taiwan, Taiwan, 4Molecular
Imaging Center, Chang-Gung University and Memorial
Hospital, Linkou, Taiwan, Taiwan
We use magnetic-resonance relaxivity technology to
perform quantitative PK/PD analysis of small molecule in
BBB animal model. Area-under-curve (AUC) map were then
transferred from a series of time-dependent R1 maps to
perform PD characteristic of Gd-DTPA in order to reflect
Evans blue permeate dynamics. The analyzed accumulated
R1 relaxivity provide high correlation with the Evans
blue, implies that the R1-based pharmacodynamic analysis
provide reasonable mapping to the permeability of the
Evans blue into the BBB-disrupted region. This study
provides an improved quantitative MR protocol for
analyze the therapeutic molecule leakage when using
focused ultrasound to induce BBB disruption for future
brain drug delivery.
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1574. |
MRI visualization of
intratumor release/distribution of liposomal drugs triggered
by sonication/sonoporation
Enzo Terreno1, Pierangela Giustetto1,
Silvia Rizzitelli1, Cinzia Boffa1,
Daniela Delli Castelli1, and Silvio Aime1
1Department of Chemistry and Molecular &
Preclinical Imaging Centers, University of Turin, Turin,
TO, Italy
This contribution deals with the use of different
acoustic radiations able to trigger a non-thermal drug
release from liposomes and to cause a permeabilization
of the cell membranes in the lesion that facilitates the
drug diffusion in the tumor mass and enables the drug to
be internalized by most of the cell phenotypes of the
tumor. MRI was used to provide the necessary
non-invasive guide for assessing the drug distribution
(as well as the tumor growth) through the use of
liposomes encapsulating the clinically approved
paramagnetic complex Gadoteridol.
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1575. |
Combined Magnetic
Resonance Imaging and Ultrasound Echography Guidance for
motion compensated HIFU Interventions
Mario Ries1,2, Baudouin Denis de Senneville1,2,
Yvan Regard2, and Chrit Moonen1,2
1Imaging Division, UMC Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands, 2CNRS
/ University of Bordeaux 2, IMF, Bordeaux, France
MR-guided high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU)
ablations on continuously moving organs, such as the
liver and the kidney requires MRI to full-fill two roles
simultaneously: 1) MRI has to provide anatomical
information with high spatio-temporal resolution and low
image latency to provide target tracking information. 2)
Motion corrected MR-thermometry provides the basis for
retro-active power control and allows monitoring the
progression of the ablation process. This feasibility
study investigates the possibility to use ultrasound
(US) echography as an additional imaging modality for
continuous target tracking, while performing
simultaneously real-time MR-thermometry to guide the
HIFU ablation process.
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1576. |
Strategy for simultaneous
region-tracking and temperature-monitoring in the liver
during free-breathing
Bruno Madore1, Matthew Toews1,
Chang-Sheng Mei1, Renxin Chu1, W.
Scott Hoge1, and Lawrence P. Panych1
1Department of Radiology, Harvard Medical
School, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, United
States
MR-guidance for thermal ablation therapy in moving
organs such as the liver is a challenging application,
as it requires tracking the region targeted for ablation
while simultaneously measuring temperature in and around
it. A pulse sequence was implemented that presents
advantages over regular gradient-echo and echo-planar
sequences, both in its ability to enable motion tracking
and to detect temperature changes. A software system was
developed combining fast landmark-based image tracking
and temperature calculation, and users were asked to
visually judge the performance of the software as
applied to in vivo data.
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1577. |
Three-Dimensional Focal
Spot Tracking based on Portal Vain Tree Structure
Etsuko Kumamoto1,2, Syuhei Iwaoka2,
Yoshie Takao3, Daisuke Kokuryo4,
Toshiya Kaihara2, and Kagayaki Kuroda5,6
1Information Technology and Science Center,
Kobe University, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan, 2Graduate
School of System Informatics, Kobe University, Kobe,
Hyogo, Japan, 3Graduate
School of Engineering, Kobe University, Kobe, Hyogo,
Japan, 4Molecular
Imaging Center, National Institute of Radiological
Sciences, Chiba, Japan, 5Graduate
School of Engineering, Tokai University, Hiratsuka,
Japan, 6Foundation
for Kobe International Medical Alliance, Kobe, Hyogo,
Japan
In this study, we proposed two three-dimensional target
tracking techniques for MRgFUS of liver. One method was
based on a triangular pyramid constructed with a part of
branching vessel and a target. The other method
projected vertexes of the triangular pyramid onto each
axis for single-dimensional tracking. We acquired series
of multi-slice balanced SSFP images in sagittal plane of
a healthy volunteerfs liver under slow pace
respirations and reconstructed isotropic voxel images
for ease to extract a branching vessel for interest. The
experimental results demonstrate feasibility of
three-dimensional tracking based on portal vain tree
structure.
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1578. |
Reduction of Motion
Artifacts in MRgFUS in the Brain using Hybrid Thermometry
Ron Instrella1, Kim Butts Pauly2,
Will Grissom3, and Viola Rieke4
1Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, United States, 2Radiology,
Stanford University, United States, 3Biomedical
Engineering, Vanderbilt University, United States, 4Radiology
and Biomedical Imaging, University of California San
Francisco, United States
Advancements in MR-guided temperature imaging have
accelerated the use of focused ultrasound in clinical
brain treatments; however, the currently used proton
resonance frequency (PRF) baseline subtraction method is
susceptible to motion. The hybrid algorithm uses both
multibaseline and referenceless thermometry to produce
improved temperature measurements in moving organs. In
this study, we show that a pre-procedural baseline
library of 13 images is sufficient for reducing motion
artifacts using hybrid temperature reconstruction in the
brain, in an attempt to achieve more reliable
temperature measurements and minimize scan time.
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1579.
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MR Single Shot Fast Spin
Echo ARFI
Andrew B. Holbrook1, Pauline W. Worters1,
Brian A. Hargreaves1, and Kim Butts Pauly1
1Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford,
CA, United States
MR acoustic radiation force imaging (MR-ARFI) has been
shown to be a means of visualizing high intensity
focused ultrasound (HIFU) focal locations without the
need for applying extensive energy with a thermal test
spot. To reduce geometry distortion and improve the
registration of ARFI localization compared to collected
scout images, we demonstrate a modified rFOV single shot
FSE (ssFSE) MR-ARFI pulse sequence. In ssFSE, the phase
from the displacement manifests itself as rings of
destructive cancellations in the magnitude of the MRI
image and is thus easily visualized. We present initial
results in phantom experiments.
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1580. |
Real-time Monitoring of
Cavitation Effect of Microbubbles by MRI: In
Vitro Experiments
Hsiung-Hao Li1, Chung-Hsin Wang1,
Chih-Kuang Yeh1, and Hsu-Hsia Peng1
1Biomedical Engineering and Environmental
Sciences, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan
To increase the permeability of the blood¡Vbrain barrier
(BBB), using focused ultrasound (FUS) in the presence of
microbubbles (MBs) is a well-known strategy for local,
non-invasive, transient, and reversible BBB disruption.
Gas-filled MBs itself can potentially be used as a
unique MR contrast agent because of their magnetic
susceptibility effect and localized manipulation via FUS
cavitation. The pulse sequence of Half Fourier
Acquisition Single Shot Turbo Spin Echo (HASTE) was used
to real-time monitoring of signal changes of MBs during
performing FUS.Different signal changes with varied
conditions of MBs concentration and FUS power were
demonstrated.
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1581. |
Investigation into
non-thermal changes in R2* during HIFU heating
Nick Todd1, Josh de Bever2,
Mahamadou Diakite3, Allison Payne1,
and Dennis L. Parker1
1Radiology/UCAIR, University of Utah, Salt
Lake CIty, UT, United States, 2Computer
Science, University of Utah, Salt Lake CIty, UT, United
States, 3Physics,
University of Utah, Salt Lake CIty, UT, United States
The temperature dependence of R2* has been well
validated. However, recent experiments indicate that R2*
values in pork muscle are affected by an additional
non-thermal processes during HIFU heating. In this
abstract, we present the evidence for this "mechanical"
effect and attempt to separate the changes in R2* during
HIFU heating into the "mechanical" effects and the
thermal effects.
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1582. |
Characterization of the in
vivo Histotripsy
Lesion Using High Field MRI
Steven P Allen1, William W Roberts2,
Timothy L Hall1, Charles A Cain1,
and Luis Hernandez-Garcia1
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States, 2Department
of Urology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan,
United States
Ultrasound based cavitation can non-invasively
fractionate tissue (histotripsy) down to sub-organelle
granularity. It is unknown how bio-effects may alter in
vivo histotripsy lesions. Here, we use T1 and T2
weighted MRI of harvested prostates to characterize the
in vivo histotripsy lesion into three zones: a liquefied
focal zone, a margin of partially disrupted tissue, and
a hemorrhage zone of negligible damage.
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1583. |
The Role of Eddy Currents
in EPI Thermometry for Transcranial MR-Guided Focused
Ultrasound
Silke M. Lechner-Greite1, Beat Werner2,
Lorne W. Hofstetter3, Timo Schirmer1,
Dixon W Thomas3, Yoav Medan4, and
Desmond Yeo3
1Diagnostics and Biomedical Technologies, GE
Global Research Europe, Garching n. Munich, Germany, 2MR-Center,
University Children’s Hospital Zurich, Zurich,
Switzerland,3MRI Laboratory, GE Global
Research Niskayuna, Albany, NY, United States, 4Insightec,
Tirat Carmel, Israel
We report on echo planar imaging for fast image tracking
and MR thermometry in the presence of a transcranial
focused ultrasound setup, where the EPI images suffer
from strong spatial distortions due to eddy currents
induced in the ground plane of the transducer setup.
Alternative ground plane segmentation patterns are
evaluated to reduce the eddy current artifacts.
Performance is predicted by finite element simulation
and verified by EPI scans of a spherical phantom wrapped
with thin copper strips of different segmentation
patterns to mimic different transducer ground plane
configurations.
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Traditional
Poster Session - Interventional |
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Interventional MRI from Head to Toe: Techniques & Applications
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 15:30 |
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1584. |
Real-time Interactive MRI
Using a Passive Magnetic Field Sensor
Alan McMillan1, Steven Roys1, and
Rao Gullapalli1
1Magnetic Resonance Research Center,
Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine,
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore,
MD, United States
The ability of a conventional high-field MR scanner to
function as a dynamic, flexible real-time interventional
imaging tool is appealing as closed-bore systems become
more open and accessible. Currently available fast
imaging techniques can acquire images with a rapid frame
rate, but real-time modification of the image plane
requires an active or passive navigational sensor. We
have developed a system to enable real-time interactive
MRI on closed-bore scanner using a passive magnetic
field sensor (PMFS).
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1585. |
Extensible Real-time MRI
Platform for Intraoperative Targeting and Monitoring
Benjamin P. Grabow1, Walter F. Block1,
Andy L. Alexander1, Samuel A. Hurley1,
Chris D. Ross2, Karl A. Sillay1,
Juan M. Santos3, William R. Overall3,
Perry E. Radau4, Graham A. Wright4,
and Ethan K. Brodsky1
1University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United
States, 2Engineering
Resources Group, Inc., Pembroke Pines, FL, United
States, 3HeartVista
Inc., Palo Alto, CA, United States,4Sunnybrook
Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada
Real-time MRI has the potential to enable many
intraoperative surgical processes, but there is a great
need within the MR community for extensible software
platforms that can allow rapid development of tools for
MR guided procedures. One such platform is based upon
the RTHawk system for real-time acquisition and
reconstruction and the Vurtigo system for interactive
visualization. We use this platform to develop a system
for performing targeted intracerebral infusions under
MRI guidance. Initial testing of our system in phantoms
and ex vivo brains has shown targeting accuracy on the
order of 1-2 mm.
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1586. |
Impact of an advanced
patient registration on the experimental targeting accuracy
of percutaneous MRI interventions guided by a clinical
navigation system
Harald Busse1, Nikita Garnov1,
Gregor Thörmer1, Thomas Kahn1, and
Michael Moche1
1Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
Department, Leipzig University Hospital, Leipzig,
Germany
Many radiological and surgical interventions are guided
by preoperative or intraoperative MRI data that need to
be registered to the patient, a task typically
accomplished by marker-based methods. This work presents
a fully automatic technique for simultaneous 3D
localization of a larger (>3) number of MR-visible
markers, which was generally found to be fast, accurate
and very reliable. Using the example of a clinical
navigation solution for closed-bore MRI scanners, the
use of five instead of three markers for patient
registration may significantly improve targeting
accuracy. These findings are likely to apply to other MR
markers and settings as well.
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1587. |
Registering Real Time and
Prior Image Data for MR Guided Interventions
Robert Sheng Xu1, and Graham Wright1
1Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Minimally invasive cardiac surgeries often require the
manipulation of an interventional catheter under imaging
guidance. The latter provides a visual roadmap for
targeting of a diseased region, and simultaneously
tracks the anatomic position of the interventional
device. MRI is a suitable modality for performing this
visual guidance, as it provides excellent soft tissue
contrast for depicting the cardiac structures. However,
tradeoffs exist between fast acquisition times and
overall image quality. In this research, a multi-scale
approach is proposed to register fast real-time images
and previously acquired high quality MR volumes to help
improve the accuracy of MR guided procedures.
|
1588. |
Automatic scan-plane
prescription by optical instrument tracking: proof of
concept in a closed-bore MRI
Harald Busse1, Nikita Garnov1,
Gregor Thörmer1, Thomas Kahn1, and
Michael Moche1
1Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
Department, Leipzig University Hospital, Leipzig,
Germany
MR fluoroscopy allows the radiologist to guide and
control percutaneous interventions in the magnet of
wide-bore and open scanners. This work presents an
automatic scan-plane prescription that relies on a
flexible optical instrument tracking. It involves a
real-time pulse sequence with a proper interface for
numerical scan control and a special marker-based
registration scheme. The technique overcomes typical
line-of-sight problems of other approaches and can be
flexibly added to virtually any scanner environment.
Successful implementation and experimental target
approaches with subsecond image updates are demonstrated
for the worst-case scenario of a long and narrow
cylindrical scanner.
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1589. |
Development of an
air-driven, MR-compatible and x-ray transparent bone drill
Felix Victor Guettler1, Kim Winterwerber2,
Andreas Heinrich1, Bernd Hamm1,
and Ulf Teichgraeber1
1Department of Radiology, Charité -
University Hospital Berlin, Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 2MGB,
Berlin, Germany
The purpose of the study was to develop a bone drill for
real-time interventions under MRI- and CT-guidance. The
device does not influence the imaging, is able to bore
through dense structures, and enables the placement of
Kirschner wires. A special designed, pneumatically
controlled drive system of ferrite-free components was
developed. During a phantom experiment, compact bone was
successfully drilled. Moreover, the drill is
sterilizable. The manufacture of an MR-compatible bone
drill, comparable to the power of a standard MR
non-compatible system, is in principle possible. Such an
engine could open new options in CT- and MRI-navigated
surgery.
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1590. |
Navigation of quick MR
scanning setup with intraluminal RF coil for integrated MR-endoscope
system
Yuichiro Matsuoka1, Etsuko Kumamoto2,3,
Akihiro Takahashi3, Yoshinori Morita4,
Hiromu Kutsumi4, Takeshi Azuma4,
and Kagayaki Kuroda1,5
1Foundation for Kobe International Medical
Alliance, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan, 2Information
Science and Technology Center, Kobe University, Kobe,
Hyogo, Japan, 3Graduate
School of System Informatics, Kobe University, Kobe,
Hyogo, Japan, 4Kobe
University School of Medicine, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan, 5School
of Information Science and Technology, Tokai University,
Hiratsuka, Kanagawa, Japan
An MR-endoscope system has been suggested to make an
endoscopy precise by performing an MR imaging with an
intraluminal RF coil and showing MR images and a scope
view. It is not easy to decide proper imaging position
quickly by intraluminal RF coil because of invisible
coil location inside body. The way to find the proper
imaging location by using a tracking system with the
scope was established. The location was properly
detected in about 40 seconds by calculating a centroid
coordinate on the coil plane without general
localization procedure. This function would be helpful
in a clinical usage.
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1591. |
Rapid Entry Point
Localization for Percutaneous Interventions
Eva Rothgang1,2, and Wesley D. Gilson2
1Pattern Recognition Lab, Department of
Computer Science, Friedrich-Alexander University,
Erlangen, Germany, 2Center
for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens Corporate Research,
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
An increasing number of minimally-invasive percutaneous
needle interventions is performed under MR guidance
including biopsies, targeted drug delivery and thermal
ablations. All of these procedures require the
identification of a skin entry site for needle
placement. Even though this sounds straightforward, it
is often a time consuming process as the entry site is
usually identified in an iterative fashion under
real-time imaging using a fingertip or water-filled
syringe. The method presented allows to rapidly,
accurately, and reproducibly localize the skin entry
site without the need for any additional imaging or
hardware.
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1592. |
Validation of real-time
target tracking for MRI-guided interventions
Sjoerd Crijns1, Alexis Kotte1, Jan
Lagendijk1, and Bas Raaymakers1
1Imaging division, department of
radiotherapy, UMC Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
In MRI-guided interventions such as MR-guided HIFU and
MR-guided radiotherapy, image feed-back is applied to
adapt the treatment to the current state of the anatomy.
To do this effectively in treatment of abdominal organs,
the target location must be tracked during motion
induced by patient breathing. To this end, we propose to
track a single point in an image series using a Minimum
Output Sum of Squares (MOSSE) filter and validate its
performance. We validate the performance of this method
and find that it can track targets with sub-millimetre
precission while processing time per frame remains less
than one millisecond.
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1593. |
Phase-Encoded Resonant
Marker Identification and Tracking
Marc Rea1, Donald McRobbie1,
Francesca Galassi2, Djordje Brujic2,
Mihailo Ristic2, and Ian Young2
1Radiological Sciences Unit, Imperial College
Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom, 2Mechanical
Engineering, Imperial College London, London, United
Kingdom
A real-time imaging scheme employing fiducial phase
encoding has been demonstrated to provide a means of
uniquely identifying markers even in close proximity.
Using this method, the required number of projections
for 3D tracking was reduced to three.
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1594. |
Compressed
sensing-accelerated spectroscopic imaging to obtain
geometrically accurate water & fat images and field maps for
use in MR-guided interventions
J.S. van Gorp1, S.P.M. Crijns2,
J.G. Bouwman1, B.W. Raaymakers2,
C.J.G. Bakker1, and P.R. Seevinck1
1Image Sciences Institute, UMC Utrecht,
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Radiotherapy,
UMC Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
In this work, a 2D-phase encoded spectroscopic imaging
sequence is exploited for its geometric fidelity, its
insensitivity for signal dephasing due to local
susceptibility differences and its ability to provide
spectroscopic information to be used for water-fat
decomposition and field map generation.
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1595. |
Imaging Tasks Useful in
Convection-enhanced Drug Delivery in the Brain: Depicting
Distal Cerebral Vasculature
Miles Olsen1, Benjamin Grabow1,
Ethan Brodsky1, Karl Sillay1, Andy
Alexander1, Labonny Biswas2, Roey
Flor2, Perry Radau2, Graham Wright2,
and Walter Block1
1University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison,
Wisconsin, United States, 2Imaging
Research, Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada
Improving the understanding of convection-enhanced
delivery (CED) of drugs requires easy to use software
for targeting, monitoring, and evaluating the treatment
zone. We concentrate here on imaging and visualizing
distal cerebral vasculature that could present unwanted
escape routes during possible CED treatment for
Parkinson’s disease in the putamens. An imaging protocol
is presented that surpasses conventional Time of Flight
in visualizing the perforating arteries in the putamen,
vessels too small to be of interest in clinical imaging
today. An extensible open-source software platform is
modified to show both vascular and T1-weighted image
volumes for later catheter alignment in CED procedures.
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1596. |
MR Monitoring of Non
Contrast-enhanced brain infusions with MRI T1 Mapping
Samuel A. Hurley1, Do P. Tromp2,
Marina E. Emborg1,3, Sachiko Ohshima-Hosoyama3,
Martin Brady4, Raghu Raghavan4,
Ken Kubota5, and Andrew L. Alexander1,6
1Medical Physics, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, WI, United States, 2Waisman
Laboratory for Brain Imaging and Behavior, University of
Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United States, 3Wisconsin
National Primate Research Center, University of
Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United States, 4Therataxis,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 5Kinetics
Foundation, Los Altos, CA, United States, 6Psychiatry,
University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United States
Convection enhanced delivery (CED) is a method for
targeted drug delivery to the brain with a uniform
concentration and limited spatial extent. We present a
quantitative T1 mapping approach to track infusion
progress and concentration without the need for
T1-shortening contrast agents, which contain heavy
metals and may put patients at higher risk for
Parkinson's disease progression.
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1597. |
Cortical vessel imaging
and visualization for image guided depth electrode insertion
Wenbo Liu1, Hua Guo2, Xiaofei Du1,
Hui Ding1, Wenjing Zhou3,
Guangming Zhang3, and Guangzhi Wang1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, 2Center
for Biomedical Imaging Research & Department of
Biomedical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing,
China, 3Tsinghua
University YuQuan Hospital, Beijing, China
MR Imaging has been widely used in neurosurgery for
guiding surgeons perform more accurate and less invasive
surgery. Stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG) is
considered as gold standard for epileptogenic zone (EZ)
location with the depth electrode insertion procedure
after craniotomy. Recently, with the development of
surgical navigation, minimally invasive depth electrode
insertion without craniotomy has been developed with
many obvious advantages. The biggest challenge of the
surgery is to avoid intracranial hemorrhage during the
insertion. Accurate and fine imaging and reconstruction
for cortical vessel can help surgeons perform the
surgical planning to avoid the hemorrhage. This study
sought to develop the appropriate technique for cortical
vessel imaging and visualization to avoid intracranial
hemorrhage during the depth electrode insertion.
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1598. |
Retrospective R1 Atlas
Mapping of Brain Infusions
Do P.M. Tromp1, Marina E. Emborg1,
Samuel A. Hurley1, Nagesh Adluru1,
Martin L. Brady2, Raghu Raghavan2,
Ken Kubota3, and Andrew L. Alexander1
1University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United
States, 2Therataxis,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Kinetics
Foundation, Los Altos, CA, United States
New treatments of brain diseases like Parkinson’s
disease and brain tumors are focusing on direct and
local delivery of therapeutics in the brain.
Convection-enhanced delivery (CED) has been proposed to
increase the distribution and dose of therapeutic agents
in a target area beyond simple diffusion. In this
project we developed an image analysis framework to
retrospectively generate a normalized statistical atlas
of infusion studies, which will facilitate the
investigation of how different infusion factors
influence the treatment outcome.
|
1599. |
Towards compressed sensing
accelerated geometrically undistorted Single Point Images
under 10 seconds
J.S. van Gorp1, J.G. Bouwman1,
C.J.G. Bakker1, and P.R. Seevinck1
1Image Sciences Institute, UMC Utrecht,
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
In this work, a purely-phase encoded FID spectroscopic
imaging sequence is adapted to provide 2D geometrically
undistorted images in a reasonable scan time and
compared to conventional methods.
|
1600. |
Cardiac catheter ablation
under real time MR guidance: initial clinical application
Peter Nordbeck1,2, Meinrad Beer3,
Marcus Wamuth1, Daniel Gensler2,
Theresa Reiter1, Herbert Köstler3,
Thomas Pabst3, Peter M Jakob2,
Mark E Ladd4, Harald H Quick5,
Wolfgang R Bauer1, and Oliver Ritter1
1Internal Medicine I - Cardiology, University
Hospital Wuerzburg, Wuerzburg, Germany, 2Experimental
Physics V, University of Wuerzburg, Wuerzburg, Germany, 3Radiology,
University Hospital Wuerzburg, Wuerzburg, Germany, 4Diagnostic
and Interventional Radiology, University Duisburg-Essen,
Essen, Germany, 5Medical
Physics, University Erlangen-Nuernberg, Erlangen,
Germany
Interventional electrophysiology (EP) for diagnosis and
treatment of cardiac arrhythmia is currently performed
under fluoroscopic guidance, which offers poor tissue
contrast and limited feedback on therapy efficacy or
complications. MR guided EP has the potential to solve
many of these problems, but is technically challenging
and accompanied by specific additional patient risks due
to the technical equipment needed in the scanner room.
Our group developed an EP setup for diagnosis and
therapy of arrhythmia under real time MR guidance. The
results from the first clinical applications in two
patients with arrhythmia resistant to conventional
therapy are presented.
|
1601. |
SIMULATION OF PERCUTANEOUS
CORONARY INTERVENTION: MRI AND MDCT ASSESSMENT OF CORONARY
MICROEMBOLI
Maythem Saeed1, Loi Do1, Steven W
Hetts1, and Mark Wilson1
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University
of California San Francisco, San Francisco, Ca, United
States
The purpose of this transitional study was to determine
threshold microemboli volume that causes visible
microinfarct on MRI and MDCT. Cardiac injury biomarkers
and histochemical staining were used to confirm the
presence of myocardial injury. Pigs (n=18) received
either 16mm3 or 32mm3 volumes of 40-120μm diameter
microemboli. Three days after intervention contrast
enhanced MDCT and MRI were performed. A threshold method
was used to measure microinfarct on MRI/MDCT.
Creatine-kinase MB, troponin I and triphenyltetrazolium
chloride stain were used to confirmed myocardial injury.
MRI and MDCT may be useful in evaluating the
effectiveness of new therapies and future distal
filtration devices.
|
1602. |
Developments in
Endovascular Multi-Mode Coil Design: In Vivo Swine Study
Krishna N Kurpad1, Peng Wang2,
Madhav Venkateswaran3, Amish N Raval4,
and Orhan Unal2
1Radiology, University of Wisconsin, Madison,
WI, United States, 2Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, United
States, 3Electrical
and Computer Engineering, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, United States, 4Medicine,
University of Wisconsin, Madison, United States
The multi-mode coil, constructed on an endovascular
catheter, enables three functionalities, essential for a
wholly MR guided intravascular procedure, in a single
device that is connected to the MR scanner through a
single coaxial cable. These are 1) accurate tracking of
the catheter's distal tip 2) detection of the catheter
orientation and 3) high sensitivity, limited field of
view imaging. In this in vivo swine study, we add a
unipolar ablation tip to the distal end of the catheter
and demonstrate MR guidance of the multi-mode coil into
the left ventricle of the swine heart, where tissue
ablation is performed.
|
1603. |
Novel MR-Safe Guidewire
with Passive Iron-Platinum Alloy Nanoparticles for MR-Guided
Interventions
Martin Alexander Rube1, Patricia Seifert2,
Bernhard Uihlein2, Dhanapriya Kakchingtabam3,
Pascal André3, and Andreas Melzer1
1Institute for Medical Science and
Technology, University of Dundee, Dundee, United
Kingdom, 2EPflex
Feinwerktechnik GmbH, Dettingen, Germany, 3School
of Physics and Astronomy (SUPA), University of St
Andrews, St. Andrews, United Kingdom
A safe and reliable method for localising interventional
devices is being developed to facilitate MR guided
vascular intervention, which has valuable attributes
(e.g. reduced radiation dose, functional information,
high soft tissue contrast, and generally no need for
contrast agents). The proposed device localisation
aproach is based on biocompatible iron-platinum alloy
(FePt) nanoparticles in a polymeric matrix and has been
applied to a novel MR safe guidewire.
|
1604. |
Development of a stiff
MR-compatible and MR-safe catheter guidewire
Kai Dierkesmann1
1Technical University of Munich, Munich,
Germany
MR-guidance of catheter based interventions offer great
advantages compared to x-ray imaging. However,
sophisticated interventions such as transcatheter
implantations of aortic valves (TAVI) or stent-grafts
cannot benefit from those advantages because MR-safe and
-compatible catheter guidewires with sufficient
stiffness are not available yet. The development of a
completely metal free guidewire made of carbon fiber
reinforced plastics approximating steel-like stiffness
is a promising approach to fill this gap. Investigation
of prototypes with a stiff core, a flexible atraumatic
tip and friction minimizing biocompatible coating showed
great improvement in safety and artefact reduction
compared to a conventional steel guidewire.
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1605. |
Improved Workflow for
Freehand MR-Guided Percutaneous Needle Interventions:
Methods and Validation
Eva Rothgang1,2, Clifford R. Weiss3,
Frank Wacker4, Joachim Hornegger1,
Christine H. Lorenz2,3, and Wesley D. Gilson2,3
1Pattern Recognition Lab, Department of
Computer Science, Friedrich-Alexander University,
Erlangen, Germany, 2Center
for Applied Medical Imaging, Siemens Corporate Research,
Baltimore, Maryland, United States, 3Russell
H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological
Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland,
United States, 4Department
of Radiology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany
An increasing number of minimally-invasive percutaneous
needle interventions is performed under MR guidance
including biopsies, targeted drug delivery and thermal
ablations. However, these procedures are still mainly
performed at tertiary care centers and the complexity of
the current workflow is a primary barrier for more
widespread adoption. This study presents software-based
methods to improve time efficiency and targeting
accuracy of freehand percutaneous MR-guided punctures by
simplifying trajectory planning, entry point
localization, and slice alignment without introducing
additional equipment.
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1606.
|
Retrospective co-RASOR
reconstruction and post-processing enable efficient and
accurate localization of objects and devices
Hendrik de Leeuw1, Peter R Seevinck1,
and Chris J.G. Bakker1
1Image Sciences Institute, Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands
Accurate localization of field perturbing objects e.g.
needles, catheters and brachytherapy seeds, is difficult
with MRI since induced signal voids are non-specific and
distorted. Center-out Radial Sampling with Off-Resonance
reception (co-RASOR) has been shown to locate perturbers
accurately with high positive contrast, by selecting the
optimum from many off-resonance acquisitions. Herein the
efficiency and flexibility is significantly increased by
making multiple off-resonance reconstructions from one
on-resonance acquisition and automatically extracting
the optimal frequency offset. The equivalence in
accuracy of co-RASOR and CT is demonstrated by a phantom
experiment, its flexibility with an arbitrarily oriented
biopsy needle in inhomogeneous porcine tissue.
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1607. |
MRI-Monitored IntraTIPS
Local Delivery of Motexafin Gadolinium: Towards Improving
Long-Term Patency of TIPS
Han Wang1, Feng Zhang1, Yanfeng
Meng1, Tong Zhang1, Patrick Willis1,
Stephanie Soriano1, Erik Ray1,
Karim Valji1, Guixiang Zhang2, and
Xiaoming Yang1
1Radiology, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA, United States, 2Radiology,
Shanghai First People's Hospital, School of Medicine,
Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, Shanghai, China
We investigated a new technique of MRI-guided intraTIPS
local agent delivery to inhibit TIPS stenosis. Six
domestic pigs underwent TIPS procedure. Before placement
of the stent, a custom-made microporous delivery balloon
catheter was placed into the shunt, and then Motexafin
gadolinium (MGd) mixed with trypan blue dye was locally
delivered under dynamic MRI monitoring. The MGd/blue
penetration was displayed, and the increasing of the
local MR signal intensity was observed. MRI
manifestations correlated well with subsequent
histological examination. This technique is feasible in
an animal mode, and may open new avenues to improve the
long-term patency of TIPS.
|
1608. |
Diagnostic accuracy and
procedure times for 37 navigated liver biopsies in a
closed-bore MRI environment
Michael Moche1, Susann Heinig1,
Gregor Thörmer1, Nikita Garnov1,
Jochen Fuchs1, Tim Riedel1, Thomas
Kahn1, and Harald Busse1
1Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
Department, Leipzig University Hospital, Leipzig,
Germany
MRI is the method of choice for the definition of
suspect liver lesions that are barely or not seen with
ultrasound or CT imaging. A definite diagnosis is often
made by histological analysis of biopsy samples. In a
cylindrical 60-cm bore MRI, the remaining space is
practically too small to guide and place the biopsy
instrument inside the magnet. This work uses a
previously described navigation solution with virtual
real-time needle guidance outside the bore and optimized
intermediate control scanning. A diagnostic accuracy of
89% and estimated procedure times below 40 min appear to
be tolerable for clinical routine.
|
1609. |
MRI-monitored
Intra-arterial Delivery of SPIO-Labeled Natural Killer Cells
to Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Alexander Yowei Sheu1, Zhuoli Zhang1,
Weiguo Li1, Reed A Omary1,2, and
Andrew C Larson1,2
1Radiology, Northwestern University -
Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, Northwestern University - McCormick School
of Engineering and Applied Science, Evanston, IL, United
States
This study aims to demonstrate transcatheter
intra-arterial (IA) infusion for targeted delivery to
HCC and to validate the potential of iron oxide labeling
methods to visualize IA natural killer lymphocyte (NK)
delivery with MRI. NKs were labeled with iron oxide
nanoparticles. Liver tumors were grown in rats. Catheter
was placed in proper hepatic artery; 7.0T MRI performed
T2*W scans pre- and post- NK infusion. NK viability was
unchanged after labeling. Labeling efficacy was >95%.
Infusions significantly reduced tumor T2*. Histologic NK
measurements were significantly higher in tumor than
normal liver. Selective intra-hepatic delivery of
labeled NKs was visualized with MRI.
|
1610. |
Intrabiliary MRI-monitored
Local Delivery of Motexafin Gadolinium
Feng Zhang1, Yanfeng Meng1,
Stephanie Soriano1, Patrick Willis1,
David Glickerman1, and Xiaoming Yang1
1Radiology, University of Washington,
Seattle, Washington, United States
This study was to develop a new technique of
intrabiliary MRI-guided local agent delivery. We
validated the feasibility of using MR to monitor, in
vivo, intrabiliary delivery of MGd into the pig common
bile duct walls of 6 pigs, which was confirmed by
subsequent MRI-histology correlation. This new technique
may open new revenues for MR-guided intrabiliary local
delivery of therapeutics, such as genes and drugs, to
treat malignant pancreatobiliary diseases.
|
1611. |
MR Imaging of Thiel
Embalmed Human Cadavers
Mariana Gueorguieva1, Desmond Teck Beng Yeo2,
Roos Eisma3, and Andreas Melzer1
1Institute for Medical Sciences and
Technology, University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland,
United Kingdom, 2MR
lab, Diagnostic & Biomedical Technologies, GE Global
Research, Niskayuna, NY, United States, 3Centre
for Anatomy and Human Identification, College of Life
Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland, United
Kingdom
The motivation for the present work is the observed loss
of signal and contrast when Thiel-embalmed human
cadavers are imaged using clinical MR sequences. Here,
we present the results from B1+ magnitude mapping of
embalmed cadavers. EM simulations of the B1+
distribution in a visible male model were performed
using a range of tissue electrical conductivity values.
Our results show that RF penetration issues begin to
develop for values of electrical conductivity as low as
2.6 S/m. We conclude that diminished RF penetration due
to the high conductivity of the embalming fluids is the
primary mechanism that affects MR imaging.
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