20 research outputs found

    Magn Reson Med

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    To improve motion robustness of functional fetal MRI scans by developing an intrinsic real-time motion correction method. MRI provides an ideal tool to characterize fetal brain development and growth. It is, however, a relatively slow imaging technique and therefore extremely susceptible to subject motion, particularly in functional MRI experiments acquiring multiple Echo-Planar-Imaging-based repetitions, for example, diffusion MRI or blood-oxygen-level-dependency MRI. A 3D UNet was trained on 125 fetal datasets to track the fetal brain position in each repetition of the scan in real time. This tracking, inserted into a Gadgetron pipeline on a clinical scanner, allows updating the position of the field of view in a modified echo-planar imaging sequence. The method was evaluated in real-time in controlled-motion phantom experiments and ten fetal MR studies (17 + 4-34 + 3 gestational weeks) at 3T. The localization network was additionally tested retrospectively on 29 low-field (0.55T) datasets. Our method achieved real-time fetal head tracking and prospective correction of the acquisition geometry. Localization performance achieved Dice scores of 84.4% and 82.3%, respectively for both the unseen 1.5T/3T and 0.55T fetal data, with values higher for cephalic fetuses and increasing with gestational age. Our technique was able to follow the fetal brain even for fetuses under 18 weeks GA in real-time at 3T and was successfully applied "offline" to new cohorts on 0.55T. Next, it will be deployed to other modalities such as fetal diffusion MRI and to cohorts of pregnant participants diagnosed with pregnancy complications, for example, pre-eclampsia and congenital heart disease

    High resolution and contrast 7 tesla MR brain imaging of the neonate

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    IntroductionUltra-high field MR imaging offers marked gains in signal-to-noise ratio, spatial resolution, and contrast which translate to improved pathological and anatomical sensitivity. These benefits are particularly relevant for the neonatal brain which is rapidly developing and sensitive to injury. However, experience of imaging neonates at 7T has been limited due to regulatory, safety, and practical considerations. We aimed to establish a program for safely acquiring high resolution and contrast brain images from neonates on a 7T system.MethodsImages were acquired from 35 neonates on 44 occasions (median age 39 + 6 postmenstrual weeks, range 33 + 4 to 52 + 6; median body weight 2.93 kg, range 1.57 to 5.3 kg) over a median time of 49 mins 30 s. Peripheral body temperature and physiological measures were recorded throughout scanning. Acquired sequences included T2 weighted (TSE), Actual Flip angle Imaging (AFI), functional MRI (BOLD EPI), susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI), and MR spectroscopy (STEAM).ResultsThere was no significant difference between temperature before and after scanning (p = 0.76) and image quality assessment compared favorably to state-of-the-art 3T acquisitions. Anatomical imaging demonstrated excellent sensitivity to structures which are typically hard to visualize at lower field strengths including the hippocampus, cerebellum, and vasculature. Images were also acquired with contrast mechanisms which are enhanced at ultra-high field including susceptibility weighted imaging, functional MRI, and MR spectroscopy.DiscussionWe demonstrate safety and feasibility of imaging vulnerable neonates at ultra-high field and highlight the untapped potential for providing important new insights into brain development and pathological processes during this critical phase of early life

    Towards Dense Flexible Transceive Coil Array:Comparison Study of Coaxial Dipoles for 7T Human Torso MRI

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    Towards Dense Flexible Transceive Coil Array:Comparison Study of Coaxial Dipoles for 7T Human Torso MRI

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    Interventional cardiac MRI using an add‐on parallel transmit MR system: In vivo experience in sheep

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    International audiencePurpose: We present in vivo testing of a parallel transmit system intended for interventional MR-guided cardiac procedures.Methods: The parallel transmit system was connected in-line with a conventional 1.5 Tesla MRI system to transmit and receive on an 8-coil array. The system used a current sensor for real-time feedback to achieve real-time current control by determining coupling and null modes. Experiments were conducted on 4 Charmoise sheep weighing 33.9-45.0 kg with nitinol guidewires placed under X-ray fluoroscopy in the atrium or ventricle of the heart via the femoral vein. Heating tests were done in vivo and post-mortem with a high RF power imaging sequence using the coupling mode. Anatomical imaging was done using a combination of null modes optimized to produce a useable B1 field in the heart.Results: Anatomical imaging produced cine images of the heart comparable in quality to imaging with the quad mode (all channels with the same amplitude and phase). Maximum observed temperature increases occurred when insulation was stripped from the wire tip. These were 4.1℃ and 0.4℃ for the coupling mode and null modes, respectively for the in vivo case; increasing to 6.0℃ and 1.3℃, respectively for the ex vivo case, because cooling from blood flow is removed. Heating < 0.1℃ was observed when insulation was not stripped from guidewire tips. In all tests, the parallel transmit system managed to reduce the temperature at the guidewire tip.Conclusion: We have demonstrated the first in vivo usage of an auxiliary parallel transmit system employing active feedback-based current control for interventional MRI with a conventional MRI scanner

    8-channel dipole array for 7 Tesla neonatal brain and cardiac MRI

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    An 8-channel dipole array was investigated for neonatal brain and cardiac MR imaging at 7T. The coil array was compared using electromagnetic field simulations to a single-channel birdcage coil on a realistic baby model for brain and cardiac imaging. B1+-efficiency and SAR10g were evaluated. The dipole coil array demonstrated significant lower SAR10g levels for both imaging positions. The working of the constructed dipole array was assessed on adult head. We conclude that dipole arrays are a valuable approach for neonatal brain and cardiac MR imaging at 7T, and could be part of future ethics approval of a neonatal MRI application. (Abstract #4618
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