10:00 |
0224. |
MR-Guided Focused
Ultrasound for the Treatment of Essential Tremor: Initial
Experience on MR-Based Targeting and Temperature Monitoring
Yuexi Huang1, Nir Lipsman2,
Michael L. Schwartz3, Andres M. Lozano2,
and Kullervo Hynynen1
1Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, ON,
Canada, 2Division
of Neurosurgery, Toronto Western Hospital, Toronto, ON,
Canada, 3Division
of Neurosurgery, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre,
Toronto, ON, Canada
Four essential tremor patients have been treated by a MR-guided
focused ultrasound brain system (ExAblate 4000) in a
phase 1 clinical trial. Treatment target was the
ventralis intermediate nucleus (VIM) of the thalamus.
Targeting was based on distance measurement from
reference structures on a T2 image crossing through the
anterior and posterior commissures. Minor adjustments
(1mm) were made if patient had sensory response at low
power levels. It is crucial to perform temperature
mapping on all three orthogonal planes with repeated
sonications to detect any irregular shape of the actual
focal heating volume. Retrospectively, fractional
anisotropy images generated image contrast within the
thalamus next to the VIM target, which may be useful for
patient specific targeting.
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10:12 |
0225. |
Pain Palliation in Patients
with Bone Metastasis Using MR-Guided Focused Ultrasound with
Conformal Bone System: A Preliminary Report
Bio Joo1, Mi-Suk Park1, Soo Hyun
Lee1, Hye Jin Choi1, Young Tag Oh1,
Itay Rachmilevitch2, and Ori Atar2
1Yonsei University Medical School, Seoul,
Seoul, Korea, 2Insightec,
Israel, Israel, Israel
MRgFUS with CBS is effective for pain palliation in
patients with bone metastasis.
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10:24 |
0226. |
MRI-Guided Focused
Ultrasound-Mediated Drug Delivery to Pancreatic Cancer:
Safety and Efficacy
Natalya Rapoport1, Allison H. Payne2,
Christopher Dillon1, and Jill E. Shea3
1Bioengineering, University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, Utah, United States, 2Radiology
Research, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah,
United States, 3Surgery,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
In a preclinical animal model, tumor irradiation with
focal ultrasound under the MRI guidance (MRgFUS) was
applied for efficient drug delivery to pancreatic cancer
using systemically injected perfluorocarbon nanodroplet-encapsulated
drug (paclitaxel). MR thermometry was used to control
ultrasound treatment. Focal ultrasound irradiation of
the tumor triggered droplet-to-bubble transition in
perfluorocarbon nanodroplets, which resulted in the
local drug release into tumor tissue. Substantial
regression and sometimes complete resolution of
pancreatic tumors was observed. However sometimes
ultrasound treatment-related complications were
manifested. Pre-treatment MR images allowed revealing
their cause. Efficacy and safety of the suggested
treatment modality will be discussed.
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10:36 |
0227.
|
Apparent Diffusion
Coefficient Decrease During Thermal Ablation of the Prostate
as an Early Indicator for Loss of Tissue Viability.
Juan C. Plata1, Andrew B. Holbrook1,
Michael Marx1, Vasant Salgaonkar2,
Peter Jones2, Chris J. Diederich2,
Aurea Pascal-Tenorio3, Donna Bouley3,
Graham Sommer4, and Kim R. Butts Pauly5
1Radiology, Stanford, Stanford, CA, United
States, 2Radiaiton
Oncology, University of California San Francisco, San
Francisco, CA, United States, 3Comparative
Medicine, Stanford, Stanford, CA, United States, 4Clinical
Radiology, Stanford, Stanford, CA, United States, 5Radiology,
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States
Diffusion weighted MRI (DWI) has demonstrated a 36%
reduction in apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC)
following HIU induced tissue damage of the prostate. We
have previously used interleaved temperature and ADC
measurements to extract tissue viability information
from ADC measurements that are also dependent on
temperature. Our purpose is to demonstrate that the
decrease/plateau of ADC during sonication of the
prostate was indicative of a transition from viable to
non-viable tissue. We monitored treatments on healthy
tissue as well as previously damaged tissue to assess
whether our proposed marker of tissue viability is
reliable and agrees with histology.
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10:48 |
0228. |
Selective Brain Cooling in
Sheep by Intra-Ventricular Catheters: A 7T BIRDS Study
Daniel Coman1, Yuegao Huang1, John
W. Simmons2, James A. Goodrich3,
Brain McHugh4, John A. Elefteriades5,
Douglas L. Rothman1,6, and Fahmeed Hyder1,6
1Diagnostic Radiology, Yale University, New
Haven, CT, United States, 2CoolSpine
LLC, Woodbury, CT, United States, 3Comparative
Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States, 4Neurosurgery,
Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States, 5Cardiothoracic
Surgery, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States, 6Biomedical
Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United
States
Selective brain cooling to induce hypothermia is a
potentially important clinical tool for neuroprotection
against cerebral ischemia and mitigates brain injury
caused by brain trauma, cardiac arrest or stroke.
Towards this goal we developed a ventricular cooling
device for selectively inducing brain hypothermia.
However, translation to humans requires understanding of
local cooling efficiency, which can be obtained by
temperature mapping. Biosensor Imaging of Redundant
Deviation in Shifts (BIRDS) was used to obtain the time
dependence of absolute temperature distribution during
cooling. Selective cooling of each hemisphere was
achieved within 10 minutes and fast recovery to
physiological temperature was also observed.
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11:00 |
0229. |
Comprehensive Comparison of
Six Referenceless PRF Shift MR Thermometry Methods
Changjun Tie1, Chao Zou1, Mengyue
He1, Wensha Guo1, Yiu-Cho Chung1,
and Xin Liu1
1Paul C.Lauterbur Research Center for
Biomedical Imaging,Shenzhen Key Laboratory for MRI,
Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology,Chinese
Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China
Accuracy of PRF shift based MR thermometry is prone to
motion and temporal field change and several
referenceless thermometry methods have been proposed to
address these issues. However, the accuracies of these
methods and their relevance to real time temperature
monitoring have not been evaluated. We compared the
performance of the six referenceless methods proposed in
terms of temperature accuracy and computational
requirements. We found that the phase finite difference
method and the near harmonic method outperform others in
temperature accuracy, and methods that do not require
phase unwrapping are generally more computationally
efficient.
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11:12 |
0230. |
in vivo Validation
of T2-Based MR Thermometry in Adipose Tissue Layers for HIFU
Near-Field Monitoring
Paul Baron1, Mario Ries1, Martijn
de Greef1, Roel Deckers1, Max
Köhler2, Jukka Tanttu2, Chrit T.W.
Moonen1, and Lambertus W. Bartels1
1Image Sciences Institute, University Medical
Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Philips
Healthcare, Vantaa, Vantaa, Finland
The feasibility of using T2 mapping for monitoring the
near field temperature in subcutaneous adipose tissue
was investigated during a HIFU liver ablation in an in
vivo porcine model. Calibrations showed that T2 changed
linearly and reversible with temperature. When compared
to the fiber optic probe the accuracy was better than
0.9°C. During the in vivo porcine liver sonication and
the subsequent cool-down period T2-thermometry allowed
observing the temperature change due to near-field
heating in the adipose tissue with a thermometric
precision of 1.1°C.
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11:24 |
0231.
|
Non-Invasive in
vivo Loss
Tangent Imaging: Thermal Sensitivity Estimation at the
Larmor Frequency
Narae Choi1, Joonsung Lee1, Min-Oh
Kim1, Jaewook Shin1, and Dong-Hyun
Kim1
1Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Yonsei University, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, Korea
Medical thermotherapy uses thermal sensitivity
difference between tumor and normal tissue. Some factors
to determine the thermal sensitivity are the electrical
tissue properties. The loss tangent is a parameter of a
dielectric material. The loss tangent is a measure of
the electromagnetic wave energy transformed to heat
energy. It is generally assumed that the thermal
sensitivity used in hyperthermia treatment has a
positive tendency to the loss tangent hence its
knowledge can be beneficial. We propose a nondestructive
loss tangent imaging method using MREPT approach, which
is a non-invasive estimation method of probing
electrical properties.
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11:36 |
0232.
|
Towards Improving
Predictive Capabilities of MR-ARFI for Transcranial Focused
Ultrasound Therapy
Elena Kaye1, Yoni Herzberg2, Gil
Navon3, and Kim R. Butts Pauly1
1Radiology, Stanford University, Palo Alto,
California, United States, 2School
of Physics and Astronomy, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv,
Israel, 3School
of Chemistry, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
MR-guided acoustic radiation force imaging (MR-ARFI) has
been recently proposed to drive adaptive
phase-aberration correction for transcranial ultrasound
therapy. MR-ARFI detects displacement of tissue caused
by acoustic radiation force in the direction of
encoding. In a hemispherical transducer, component of
the force emitted by the elements along the main axis
varies based on geometric position of the element,
therefore encoding in this direction is less sensitive
to the ultrasound emission and phase aberrations of the
peripheral elements. Firstly, we study the effect of
numerically applied human skull phase aberrations on the
focal spot using MR thermometry that is independent of
the direction of acoustic force, and MR-ARFI with
encoding along the normal of the hemisphere. Secondly,
we demonstrate how the displacement from the individual
groups of side elements can be visualized using
displacement encoding in oblique direction perpendicular
to the face of the elements group.
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11:48 |
0233.
|
Hybrid US-MR Guided HIFU
Treatment Method with 3D Motion Compensation
-permission withheld
Zarko Celicanin1, Vincent Auboiraux2,
Oliver Bieri1, Lorena Petrusca2,
Yutaka Natsuaki3, Francesco Santini1,
Magalie Viallon2, Klaus Scheffler4,5,
and Rares Salomir2
1Radiological Physics, University of Basel
Hospital, Basel, Switzerland, 2Radiology
Department, University Hospitals of Geneva, Geneva,
Switzerland, 3Siemens
Medical Solutions, Inc., Los Angeles, CA, United States, 4MRC
Department, MPI for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen,
Germany, 5Dept.
Neuroimaging and MR-Physics, University of Tübingen,
Tübingen, Germany
Combining US and MRI into a hybrid system to guide HIFU
treatment is a novel approach in the treatment of
abdominal organs. Here, it is demonstrated the
feasibility of a novel hybrid US-MR guided HIFU with 3D
motion compensation and slice tracking of MR
thermometry. MR-based navigator was used to compensate
the out-of-plane motion, while US imaging system
provided 2D organ motion information, which were
combined into complete 3D target tracking and fed to
HIFU. To the best of the authors knowledge, this is the
first truly hybrid US-MR guided HIFU method which
achieves full 3D motion compensation.
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