AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focused on a specialized Helmotz-style clamshell coil, used for Carbon-13 (C-13) MRI, which analyzes tumor metabolism, highlighting the importance of understanding the effects of the coil's magnetic field (B field) on imaging accuracy and signal quality!* - Researchers mapped the B field of the C-13 clamshell coil and simulated how local excitation angles affect the signals, using pharmacokinetic models to quantify metabolic biomarkers like the normalized lactate ratio (nLac) and the conversion rate from pyruvate to lactate (k).
  • - Findings revealed that within a specific volume (around 12.9×11.5×13.4 cm), deviations in the B field remain

Article Abstract

Purpose: A specialized Helmholtz-style C volume transmit "clamshell" coil is currently being utilized for C excitation in pre-clinical and clinical hyperpolarized C MRI studies aimed at probing the metabolic activity of tumors in various target anatomy. Due to the widespread use of this C clamshell coil design, it is important that the effects of the C clamshell coil B profile on HP signal evolution and quantification are well understood. The goal of this study was to characterize the B field of the C clamshell coil and assess the impact of inhomogeneities on semi-quantitative and quantitative hyperpolarized MR imaging biomarkers of metabolism.

Methods: The B field of the C clamshell coil was mapped by hand using a network analyzer equipped with an S-parameter test set. Pharmacokinetic models were used to simulate signal evolution as a function of position-dependent local excitation angles, for various nominal excitation angles, which were assumed to be accurately calibrated at the isocenter. These signals were then quantified according to the normalized lactate ratio (nLac) and the apparent rate constant for the conversion of pyruvate to lactate (k ). The percent difference between these metabolic imaging biomarker maps and the reference value observed at the isocenter of the clamshell coil was calculated to estimate the potential for error due to position within the clamshell coil. Finally, regions were identified within the clamshell coil where deviations in B field inhomogeneity or imaging biomarker errors imparted by the B field were within ±10% of the value at the isocenter.

Results: The B field maps show that a limited volume encompassed by a region measuring approximately 12.9 × 11.5 × 13.4 cm (X-direction, Y-direction, Z-direction) centered in the C clamshell coil will produce deviations in the B field within ±10% of that at the isocenter. For the metabolic imaging biomarkers that we evaluated, the case when the pyruvate excitation angle (θ ) and lactate excitation angle (θ ) were equal to 10° produced the largest volumetric region with deviations within ±10% of the value at the isocenter. Higher excitation angles yielded higher signal and SNR, but the size of the region in which uniform measurements could be collected near the isocenter of the coil was reduced at higher excitation angles. The tradeoff between the size of the homogenous region at the isocenter and signal intensity must be weighed carefully depending on the particular imaging application.

Conclusion: This work identifies regions and optimal excitation angles (θ and θ ) within the C clamshell coil where deviations in B field inhomogeneity or imaging biomarker errors imparted by the B field were within ±10% of the respective value at the isocenter, and thus where excitation angles are reproducible and well-calibrated. Semi-quantitative and quantitative metabolic imaging biomarkers can vary with position in the clamshell coil as a result of B field inhomogeneity, necessitating care in patient positioning and the selection of an excitation angle set that balances reproducibility and SNR performance over the target imaging volume.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8486175PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mp.15107DOI Listing

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