Purpose: Interventional MRI has significant potential for image guidance of iliac angioplasty and related vascular procedures. A technology framework with in-room image display, control, communication and MRI-guided intervention techniques was designed and tested for its potential to provide safe, fast and efficient MRI-guided angioplasty of the iliac arteries.
Methods: A 1.5-T MRI scanner was adapted for interactive imaging during endovascular procedures using new or modified interventional devices such as guidewires and catheters. A perfused vascular phantom was used for testing. Pre-, intra- and post-procedural visualization and measurement of vascular morphology and flow was implemented. A detailed analysis of X-ray fluoroscopic angiography workflow was conducted and applied. Two interventional radiologists and one physician in training performed 39 procedures. All procedures were timed and analyzed.
Results: MRI-guided iliac angioplasty procedures were successfully performed with progressive adaptation of techniques and workflow. The workflow, setup and protocol enabled a reduction in table time for a dedicated MRI-guided procedure to 6 min 33 s with a mean procedure time of 9 min 2 s, comparable to the mean procedure time of 8 min 42 s for the standard X-ray-guided procedure.
Conclusions: MRI-guided iliac vascular interventions were found to be feasible and practical using this framework and optimized workflow. In particular, the real-time flow analysis was found to be helpful for pre- and post-interventional assessments. Design optimization of the catheters and in vivo experiments are required before clinical evaluation.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4675134 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11548-014-1102-0 | DOI Listing |
Radiother Oncol
May 2019
Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands. Electronic address:
Purpose/objective(s): To investigate the patterns of nodal failure in patients enrolled in the international multicentre EMBRACE study.
Materials/methods: Nodal disease at diagnosis (N-, N+) and nodal failure were analysed per region (NF) (pelvic (parametrial, common iliac, internal/external iliac), inguinal and para-aortic (PAO)) in 1338 patients. Treatment consisted of chemo-radiation and MRI guided brachytherapy.
Rep Pract Oncol Radiother
October 2018
Department of Radiation Oncology, Hospital de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain.
Purpose: To evaluate dosimetric and clinical findings of MRI-guided HDR brachytherapy (HDR-B) for cervical carcinoma.
Material And Methods: All patients had a CT, MRI and pelvic-paraaortic lymphadenectomy. Treatment: pelvic (+/-)para-aortic3D/IMRT radiotherapy (45 Gy), weekly cisplatin and HDR-B and pelvic node/parametrial boost 60 Gy until interstitial brachytherapy was done.
Acta Oncol
November 2017
a Department of Oncology , Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus , Denmark.
Introduction: More than 50% of patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC) have pathological nodes. Coverage probability (CovP) is a new planning technique allowing for relaxed dose at the boost periphery minimising collateral irradiation. The aim was to report the first early clinical outcome data for CovP based simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) in LACC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Comput Assist Radiol Surg
October 2015
Division of Imaging and Technology, Institute for Medical Science and Technology, University of Dundee, Wilson House, 1 Wurzburg Loan, Dundee, DD2 21FD, UK.
Purpose: A methodological framework is introduced to assess and compare a conventional fluoroscopy protocol for peripheral angioplasty with a new magnetic resonant imaging (MRI)-guided protocol. Different scenarios were considered during interventions on a perfused arterial phantom with regard to time-based and cognitive task analysis, user experience and ergonomics.
Methods: Three clinicians with different expertise performed a total of 43 simulated common iliac angioplasties (9 fluoroscopic, 34 MRI-guided) in two blocks of sessions.
Brachytherapy
June 2015
Department of Medical Physics, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark; Institute of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
Purpose: This study evaluated the dose delivered to lymph nodes (LNs) by brachytherapy (BT) and the effect of BT image-guided optimization on the LN dose.
Methods And Materials: Twenty-five patients with locally advanced cervical cancer were retrospectively analyzed, 16 patients of them had LN involvement. The patients received whole pelvis intensity-modulated radiation therapy (45-50 Gy/25-30 fx) to whole pelvis and two fractions of MRI pulsed-dose-rate BT.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!