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Safety and imaging performance of two‐channel RF shimming for fetal MRI at 3T

Authors :
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & Science
Yetisir, Filiz
Abaci Turk, Esra
Guerin, Bastien
Gagoski, Borjan A
Grant, P Ellen
Adalsteinsson, Elfar
Wald, Lawrence L
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & Science
Yetisir, Filiz
Abaci Turk, Esra
Guerin, Bastien
Gagoski, Borjan A
Grant, P Ellen
Adalsteinsson, Elfar
Wald, Lawrence L
Source :
PMC
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study investigates whether two-channel radiofrequency (RF) shimming can improve imaging without increasing specific absorption rate (SAR) for fetal MRI at 3T. METHODS: Transmit field ( B1+ ) average and variation in the fetus was simulated in seven numerical pregnant body models. Safety was quantified by maternal and fetal peak local SAR and fetal average SAR. The shim parameter space was divided into improved B1+ (magnitude and homogeneity) and improved SAR regions, and an overlap where RF shimming improved both classes of metrics compared with birdcage mode was assessed. Additionally, the effect of fetal position, tissue detail, and dielectric properties on transmit field and SAR was studied. RESULTS: A region of subject-specific RF shim parameter space improving both B1+ and SAR metrics was found for five of the seven models. Optimizing only B1+ metrics improved B1+ efficiency across models by 15% on average and 28% for the best-case model. B1+ variation improved by 26% on average and 49% for the best case. However, for these shim settings, fetal SAR increased by up to 106%. The overlap region, where both B1+ and SAR metrics improve, showed an average B1+ efficiency improvement of 6% on average across models and 19% for the best-case model. B1+ variation improved by 13% on average and 40% for the best case. RFS could also decrease maternal/fetal SAR by up to 49%/58%. CONCLUSION: RF shimming can improve imaging compared with birdcage mode without increasing fetal and maternal SAR when a patient-specific SAR model is incorporated into the shimming procedure.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PMC
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1351761829
Document Type :
Electronic Resource