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Evaluation of a Flexible 12-Channel Screen-printed Pediatric MRI Coil. | LitMetric

Evaluation of a Flexible 12-Channel Screen-printed Pediatric MRI Coil.

Radiology

From the Department of Radiology, Stanford University, 300 Pasteur Dr, Stanford, CA 94305 (S.A.W., A.C., M.A., S.V.); Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, Calif (J.C., B.L., M.L., A.C.A.); Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford, Stanford, Calif (K.O., J.R.B.); GE Healthcare, Menlo Park, Calif (V.T.); GE Healthcare, Aurora, Ohio (T.G., F.R.); and Department of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif (G.S., J.P.).

Published: April 2019

Background Screen-printed MRI coil technology may reduce the need for bulky and heavy housing of coil electronics and may provide a better fit to patient anatomy to improve coil performance. Purpose To assess the performance and caregiver and clinician acceptance of a pediatric-sized screen-printed flexible MRI coil array as compared with conventional coil technology. Materials and Methods A pediatric-sized 12-channel coil array was designed by using a screen-printing process. Element coupling and phantom signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) were assessed. Subjects were scanned by using the pediatric printed array between September and November 2017; results were compared with three age- and sex-matched historical control subjects by using a commercial 32-channel cardiac array at 3 T. Caregiver acceptance was assessed by asking nurses, technologists, anesthesiologists, and subjects or parents to rate their coil preference. Diagnostic quality of the images was evaluated by using a Likert scale (5 = high image quality, 1 = nondiagnostic). Image SNR was evaluated and compared. Results Twenty study participants were evaluated with the screen-printed coil (age range, 2 days to 12 years; 11 male and nine female subjects). Loaded pediatric phantom testing yielded similar noise covariance matrices and only slightly degraded SNR for the printed coil as compared with the commercial coil. The caregiver acceptance survey yielded a mean score of 4.1 ± 0.6 (scale: 1, preferred the commercial coil; 5, preferred the printed coil). Diagnostic quality score was 4.5 ± 0.6. Mean image SNR was 54 ± 49 (paraspinal muscle), 78 ± 51 (abdominal wall muscle), and 59 ± 35 (psoas) for the printed coil, as compared with 64 ± 55, 65 ± 48, and 57 ± 43, respectively, for the commercial coil; these SNR differences were not statistically significant (P = .26). Conclusion A flexible screen-printed pediatric MRI receive coil yields adequate signal-to-noise ratio in phantoms and pediatric study participants, with similar image quality but higher preference by subjects and their caregivers when compared with a conventional MRI coil. © RSNA, 2019 Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Lamb in this issue.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6444619PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2019181883DOI Listing

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