Use of a modified polysaccharide gel in developing a realistic breast phantom for MRI.

Magn Reson Imaging

Department of Radiology, University of Florida, Gainesville 32610, USA.

Published: February 1997

A polysaccharide material, TX-151, has been used together with water, NaCl, and Al powder to create a tissue equivalent gel to make a realistic, inexpensive, conveniently moldable, temporally stable tissue equivalent MRI phantom. Various phantom compositions were studied for variations in gelling time and relaxation times. Gd-DTPA added as a T1 (and T2) modifier and aluminum powder added to decrease T2 permitted phantoms to be made with a range of relaxation times comparable to human tissues. We have used this polysaccharide gel to create breast phantoms for testing breast coils and evaluating different MRI imaging sequences available for diagnosis. The breast phantoms consisted of a layer of Crisco, a good model for adipose tissue, surrounding the TX-151 gel. Some of these phantoms were created with a silicone implant encapsulated in the gel to simulate an augmented breast. More sophisticated phantoms can easily be developed by additions of other materials to this polysaccharide gel.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0730-725x(96)00054-9DOI Listing

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