4 research outputs found
Quantification of left ventricular functional parameter values using 3D spiral bSSFP and through-time Non-Cartesian GRAPPA
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Magnetic resonance imaging and model prediction for thermal ablation of tissue
To monitor and predict tissue temperature distributions and lesion boundaries during thermal ablation by combining MRI and thermal modeling methods.
Radiofrequency (RF) ablation was conducted in the paraspinal muscles of rabbits with MRI monitoring. A gradient-recalled echo (GRE) sequence via a 1.5T MRI system provided tissue temperature distribution from the phase images and lesion progression from changes in magnitude images. Post-ablation GRE estimates of lesion size were compared with post-ablation T2-weighted turbo-spin-echo (TSE) images and hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained histological slices. A three-dimensional (3D) thermal model was used to simulate and predict tissue temperature and lesion size dynamics.
The lesion area estimated from repeated GRE images remained constant during the post-heating period when the temperature of the lesion boundary was less than a critical temperature. The final lesion areas estimated from multi-slice (M/S) GRE, TSE, and histological slices were not statistically different. The model-simulated tissue temperature distribution and lesion area closely corresponded to the GRE-based MR measurements throughout the imaging experiment.
For normal tissue in vivo, the dynamics of tissue temperature distribution and lesion size during RF thermal ablation can be 1) monitored with GRE phase and magnitude images, and 2) simulated for prediction with a thermal model
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Dynamics of MRI-Guided Thermal Ablation of VX2 Tumor in Paraspinal Muscle of Rabbits
This study combines fast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and model simulation of tissue thermal ablation for monitoring and predicting the dynamics of lesion size for tumor destruction. In vivo experiments were conducted using radiofrequency (RF) thermal ablation in paraspinal muscle of rabbit with a VX2 tumor. Before ablation, turbo-spin echo (TSE) images visualized the 3-D tumor (necrotic core and tumor periphery) and surrounding normal tissue. MR gradient-recalled echo (GRE) phase and magnitude images were acquired repeatedly in 3.3 s at 30-s intervals during and after thermal ablation to follow tissue temperature distribution dynamics and lesion development in tumor and surrounding normal tissue. Final lesion sizes estimated from GRE magnitude, post-ablation TSE, and stained histologic images were compared. Model simulations of temperature distribution and lesion development dynamics closely corresponded to the experimental data from MR images in tumor and normal tissue. The combined use of MR image monitoring and model simulation has the potential for improving pretreatment planning and real-time prediction of lesion-size dynamics for guidance of thermal ablation of tumors