| Literature DB >> 25891846 |
Matthias Malzacher1, Raffi Kalayciyan2, Simon Konstandin2, Stefan Haneder3, Lothar R Schad2.
Abstract
Sodium magnetic resonance imaging ((23)Na MRI) is a unique and non-invasive imaging technique which provides important information on cellular level about the tissue of the human body. Several applications for (23)Na MRI were investigated with regard to the examination of the tissue viability and functionality for example in the brain, the heart or the breast. The (23)Na MRI technique can also be integrated as a potential monitoring instrument after radiotherapy or chemotherapy. The main contribution in this work was the adaptation of (23)Na MRI for spine imaging, which can provide essential information on the integrity of the intervertebral disks with respect to the early detection of disk degeneration. In this work, a transmit-only receive-only dual resonator system was designed and developed to cover the whole human spine using (23)Na MRI and increase the receive sensitivity. The resonator system consisted of an already presented (23)Na whole-body resonator and a newly developed 5-channel receive-only phased-array. The resonator system was first validated using bench top and phantom measurements. A threefold SNR improvement at the depth of the spine (∼7cm) over the whole-body resonator was achieved using the spine array. (23)Na MR measurements of the human spine using the transmit-only receive-only resonator system were performed on a healthy volunteer within an acquisition time of 10minutes. A density adapted 3D radial sequence was chosen with 6mm isotropic resolution, 49ms repetition time and a short echo time of 540μs. Furthermore, it was possible to quantify the tissue sodium concentration in the intervertebral discs in the lumbar region (120ms repetition time) using this setup.Entities:
Keywords: Empfangsspule; Natrium-MR-Bildgebung; Sodium MRI; Wirbelsäulen-MR-Bildgebung; receive-only surface coil; spine MRI
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25891846 DOI: 10.1016/j.zemedi.2015.03.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Z Med Phys ISSN: 0939-3889 Impact factor: 4.820