Literature DB >> 21937345

Reference-free PRFS MR-thermometry using near-harmonic 2-D reconstruction of the background phase.

Rares Salomir1, Magalie Viallon, Antje Kickhefel, Joerg Roland, Denis R Morel, Lorena Petrusca, Vincent Auboiroux, Thomas Goget, Sylvain Terraz, Christoph D Becker, Patrick Gross.   

Abstract

Proton resonance frequency shift (PRFS) MR thermometry (MRT) is the generally preferred method for monitoring thermal ablation, typically implemented with gradient-echo (GRE) sequences. Standard PRFS MRT is based on the subtraction of a temporal reference phase map and is, therefore, intrinsically sensitive to tissue motion (including deformation) and to external perturbation of the magnetic field. Reference-free (or reference-less) PRFS MRT has been previously described by Rieke and was based on a 2-D polynomial fit performed on phase data from outside the heated region, to estimate the background phase inside the region of interest. While their approach was undeniably a fundamental progress in terms of robustness against tissue motion and magnetic perturbations, the underlying mathematical formalism requires a thick unheated border and may be subject to numerical instabilities with high order polynomials. A novel method of reference-free PRFS MRT is described here, using a physically consistent formalism, which exploits mathematical properties of the magnetic field in a homogeneous or near-homogeneous medium. The present implementation requires as input the MR GRE phase values along a thin, nearly-closed and unheated border. This is a 2-D restriction of a classic Dirichlet problem, working on a slice per slice basis. The method has been validated experimentally by comparison with the “ground truth” data, considered to be the standard PRFS method for static ex vivo tissue. “Zero measurement” of the gradient-echo phase baseline was performed in healthy volunteer liver with rapid acquisition (300 ms/image). In vivo data acquired in sheep liver during MR-guided high intensity focused ultrasound (MRgHIFU) sonication were post-processed as proof of applicability in a therapeutic scenario. Bland and Altman mean absolute difference between the novel method and the “ground truth” thermometry in ex vivo static tissue ranged between 0.069 °C and 0.968 °C, compared to the inherent “white” noise SD of 0.23 °C. The accuracy and precision of the novel method in volunteer liver were found to be on average 0.13 °C and respectively 0.65 °C while the inherent “white” noise SD was on average 0.51 °C. The method was successfully applied to large ROIs, up to 6.2 cm inner diameter, and the computing time per slice was systematically less than 100 ms using C++. The current limitations of reference-free PRFS thermometry originate mainly from the need to provide a nearly-closed border, where the MR phase is artifact-free and the tissue is unheated, plus the potential need to reposition that border during breathing to track the motion of the anatomic zone being monitored.A reference-free PRFS thermometry method based on the theoretical framework of harmonic functions is described and evaluated here. The computing time is compatible with online monitoring during local thermotherapy. The current reference-free MRT approach expands the workflow flexibility, eliminates the need for respiratory triggers, enables higher temporal resolution, and is insensitive to unique-event motion of tissue.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21937345     DOI: 10.1109/TMI.2011.2168421

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging        ISSN: 0278-0062            Impact factor:   10.048


  14 in total

1.  Influence of geometric and material properties on artifacts generated by interventional MRI devices: Relevance to PRF-shift thermometry.

Authors:  Ken Tatebe; Elizabeth Ramsay; Charles Mougenot; Mohammad Kazem; Hamed Peikari; Michael Bronskill; Rajiv Chopra
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 4.071

2.  Fast MR thermometry using an echo-shifted sequence with simultaneous multi-slice imaging.

Authors:  Yuhong Peng; Chao Zou; Yangzi Qiao; Changjun Tie; Qian Wan; Rui Jiang; Chuanli Cheng; Dong Liang; Hairong Zheng; Faqi Li; Xin Liu
Journal:  MAGMA       Date:  2018-06-14       Impact factor: 2.310

3.  Simultaneous MR thermometry and acoustic radiation force imaging using interleaved acquisition.

Authors:  Joshua T de Bever; Henrik Odéen; Lorne W Hofstetter; Dennis L Parker
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2017-08-10       Impact factor: 4.668

4.  Robust phase unwrapping for MR temperature imaging using a magnitude-sorted list, multi-clustering algorithm.

Authors:  Florian Maier; David Fuentes; Jeffrey S Weinberg; John D Hazle; R Jason Stafford
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2014-05-08       Impact factor: 4.668

5.  Respiratory-gated MRgHIFU in upper abdomen using an MR-compatible in-bore digital camera.

Authors:  Vincent Auboiroux; Lorena Petrusca; Magalie Viallon; Arnaud Muller; Sylvain Terraz; Romain Breguet; Xavier Montet; Christoph D Becker; Rares Salomir
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2014-01-29       Impact factor: 3.411

Review 6.  The road to clinical use of high-intensity focused ultrasound for liver cancer: technical and clinical consensus.

Authors:  Jean-Francois Aubry; Kim Butts Pauly; Chrit Moonen; Gail Ter Haar; Mario Ries; Rares Salomir; Sham Sokka; Kevin Michael Sekins; Yerucham Shapira; Fangwei Ye; Heather Huff-Simonin; Matt Eames; Arik Hananel; Neal Kassell; Alessandro Napoli; Joo Ha Hwang; Feng Wu; Lian Zhang; Andreas Melzer; Young-Sun Kim; Wladyslaw M Gedroyc
Journal:  J Ther Ultrasound       Date:  2013-08-01

7.  An experimental model to investigate the targeting accuracy of MR-guided focused ultrasound ablation in liver.

Authors:  Lorena Petrusca; Magalie Viallon; Romain Breguet; Sylvain Terraz; Gibran Manasseh; Vincent Auboiroux; Thomas Goget; Loredana Baboi; Patrick Gross; K Michael Sekins; Christoph D Becker; Rares Salomir
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2014-01-16       Impact factor: 5.531

8.  In vitro demonstration of focused ultrasound thrombolysis using bifrequency excitation.

Authors:  Izella Saletes; Bruno Gilles; Vincent Auboiroux; Nadia Bendridi; Rares Salomir; Jean-Christophe Béra
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2014-08-27       Impact factor: 3.411

9.  Motion Compensated Ultrasound Imaging Allows Thermometry and Image Guided Drug Delivery Monitoring from Echogenic Liposomes.

Authors:  Kalyani Ektate; Ankur Kapoor; Danny Maples; Ahmet Tuysuzoglu; Joshua VanOsdol; Selvarani Ramasami; Ashish Ranjan
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2016-08-14       Impact factor: 11.556

10.  One-lung flooding reduces the ipsilateral diaphragm motion during mechanical ventilation.

Authors:  Thomas Günther Lesser; Harald Schubert; Daniel Güllmar; Jürgen R Reichenbach; Frank Wolfram
Journal:  Eur J Med Res       Date:  2016-03-08       Impact factor: 2.175

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