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The "Loopole" Antenna: A Hybrid Coil Combining Loop and Electric Dipole Properties for Ultra-High-Field MRI

Lakshmanan, Karthik; Cloos, Martijn; Brown, Ryan; Lattanzi, Riccardo; Sodickson, Daniel K; Wiggins, Graham C
Purpose/UNASSIGNED:To revisit the "loopole," an unusual coil topology whose unbalanced current distribution captures both loop and electric dipole properties, which can be advantageous in ultra-high-field MRI. Methods/UNASSIGNED:Loopole coils were built by deliberately breaking the capacitor symmetry of traditional loop coils. The corresponding current distribution, transmit efficiency, and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) were evaluated in simulation and experiments in comparison to those of loops and electric dipoles at 7 T (297 MHz). Results/UNASSIGNED:, the loopole demonstrated significant performance boost in either the transmit efficiency or SNR at the center of a dielectric sample when compared to a traditional loop. Modest improvements were observed when compared to an electric dipole. Conclusion/UNASSIGNED:The loopole can achieve high performance by supporting both divergence-free and curl-free current patterns, which are both significant contributors to the ultimate intrinsic performance at ultra-high field. While electric dipoles exhibit similar hybrid properties, loopoles maintain the engineering advantages of loops, such as geometric decoupling and reduced resonance frequency dependence on sample loading.
PMCID:8207246
PMID: 34140840
ISSN: 1552-5031
CID: 4917682

A dual-tuned multichannel bilateral RF coil for 1 H/23 Na breast MRI at 7 T

Ianniello, Carlotta; Madelin, Guillaume; Moy, Linda; Brown, Ryan
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Sodium MRI has shown promise for monitoring neoadjuvant chemotherapy response in breast cancer. The purpose of this work was to build a dual-tuned bilateral proton/sodium breast coil for 7T MRI that provides sufficient SNR to enable sodium breast imaging in less than 10 minutes. METHODS:The proton/sodium coil consists of 2 shielded unilateral units: 1 for each breast. Each unit consists of 3 nested layers: (1) a 3-loop solenoid for sodium excitation, (2) a 3-loop solenoid for proton excitation and signal reception, and (3) a 4-channel receive array for sodium signal reception. Benchmark measurements were performed in phantoms with and without the sodium receive array insert. In vivo images were acquired on a healthy volunteer. RESULTS:The sodium receive array boosted 1.5 to 3 times the SNR compared with the solenoid. Proton SNR loss due to residual interaction with the sodium array was less than 10%. The coil enabled sodium imaging in vivo with 2.8-mm isotropic nominal resolution (~5-mm real resolution) in 9:36 minutes. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The coil design that we propose addresses challenges associated with sodium's low SNR from a hardware perspective and offers the opportunity to investigate noninvasively breast tumor metabolism as a function of sodium concentration in patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
PMCID:6626555
PMID: 31148249
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 4000212

Size-adaptable "Trellis" structure for tailored MRI coil arrays

Zhang, Bei; Brown, Ryan; Cloos, Martijn; Lattanzi, Riccardo; Sodickson, Daniel; Wiggins, Graham
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:We present a novel, geometrically adjustable, receive coil array whose diameter can be tailored to the subject in order to maximize sensitivity for a range of body sizes. THEORY AND METHODS/UNASSIGNED:A key mechanical feature of the size-adaptable receive array is its trellis structure that was motivated by similar structures found in gardening and fencing. Our implementation is a cylindrical trellis that features encircling, diagonally interleaved slats, which are linked together at intersecting points. The ensemble allows expansion or contraction to be controlled with the angle between the slats. This mechanical frame provides a base for radiofrequency coils wherein approximately constant overlap, and therefore coupling between adjacent elements, is maintained when the trellis is expanded or contracted. We demonstrate 2 trellis coil concepts for imaging lower extremity at 3T: a single-row 8-channel array built on a trellis support structure and a multirow 24-channel array in which the coil elements themselves form the trellis structure. RESULTS:We show that the adjustable trellis array can accommodate a range of subject sizes with robust signal-to-noise ratio, loading, and coupling. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The trellis coil concept enables an array of surface coils to expand and contract with negligible effect on tuning, matching, and decoupling. This allows an encircling array to conform closely to anatomy of various sizes, which provides significant gains in signal-to-noise ratio.
PMID: 30575119
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 3557202

A dual-tuned O-17/H-1 head array for direct brain oximetry at 3 Tesla

Lakshmanan, Karthik; Dehkharghani, Seena; Madelin, Guillaume; Brown, Ryan
ISI:000489237500001
ISSN: 0740-3194
CID: 4155922

Multinuclear MR imaging in diabetic peripheral neuropathy [Meeting Abstract]

Parasoglou, Prodromos; Baete, Steven; Ho, Amanda; Brown, Ryan; Convit, Antonio; Garwood, Elisabeth; Mroczek, Kenneth; Slade, Jill
ISI:000452787700077
ISSN: 1085-9489
CID: 3557752

Guns & honor [Sound Recording]

Gounder, Celine R; Cohen, Dov; Rubern, Eric; Brown, Ryan; Miller, Rory
ORIGINAL:0015257
ISSN: n/a
CID: 4980112

Transverse slot antennas for high field MRI

Alon, Leeor; Lattanzi, Riccardo; Lakshmanan, Karthik; Brown, Ryan; Deniz, Cem M; Sodickson, Daniel K; Collins, Christopher M
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Introduce a novel coil design using an electrically long transversely oriented slot in a conductive sheet. THEORY AND METHODS/UNASSIGNED:Theoretical considerations, numerical simulations, and experimental measurements are presented for transverse slot antennas as compared with electric dipole antennas. RESULTS:Simulations show improved central and average transmit and receive efficiency, as well as larger coverage in the transverse plane, for a single slot as compared to a single dipole element. Experiments on a body phantom confirm the simulation results for a slot antenna relative to a dipole, demonstrating a large region of relatively high sensitivity and homogeneity. Images in a human subject also show a large imaging volume for a single slot and six slot antenna array. High central transmit efficiency was observed for slot arrays relative to dipole arrays. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Transverse slots can exhibit improved sensitivity and larger field of view compared with traditional conductive dipoles. Simulations and experiments indicate high potential for slot antennas in high field MRI. Magn Reson Med, 2018. © 2018 The Authors Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
PMCID:5985532
PMID: 29388250
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 2933852

Synthesized tissue-equivalent dielectric phantoms using salt and polyvinylpyrrolidone solutions

Ianniello, Carlotta; de Zwart, Jacco A; Duan, Qi; Deniz, Cem M; Alon, Leeor; Lee, Jae-Seung; Lattanzi, Riccardo; Brown, Ryan
PURPOSE: To explore the use of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) for simulated materials with tissue-equivalent dielectric properties. METHODS: PVP and salt were used to control, respectively, relative permittivity and electrical conductivity in a collection of 63 samples with a range of solute concentrations. Their dielectric properties were measured with a commercial probe and fitted to a 3D polynomial in order to establish an empirical recipe. The material's thermal properties and MR spectra were measured. RESULTS: The empirical polynomial recipe (available at https://www.amri.ninds.nih.gov/cgi-bin/phantomrecipe) provides the PVP and salt concentrations required for dielectric materials with permittivity and electrical conductivity values between approximately 45 and 78, and 0.1 to 2 siemens per meter, respectively, from 50 MHz to 4.5 GHz. The second- (solute concentrations) and seventh- (frequency) order polynomial recipe provided less than 2.5% relative error between the measured and target properties. PVP side peaks in the spectra were minor and unaffected by temperature changes. CONCLUSION: PVP-based phantoms are easy to prepare and nontoxic, and their semitransparency makes air bubbles easy to identify. The polymer can be used to create simulated material with a range of dielectric properties, negligible spectral side peaks, and long T2 relaxation time, which are favorable in many MR applications. Magn Reson Med, 2017. (c) 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
PMCID:5876111
PMID: 29159985
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 2792382

Approaching ultimate intrinsic signal-to-noise ratio with loop and dipole antennas

Lattanzi, Riccardo; Wiggins, Graham C; Zhang, Bei; Duan, Qi; Brown, Ryan; Sodickson, Daniel K
PURPOSE: Previous work with body-size objects suggested that loops are optimal MR detectors at low fields, whereas electric dipoles are required to maximize signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at ultrahigh fields ( >/= 7 T). Here we investigated how many loops and/or dipoles are needed to approach the ultimate intrinsic SNR (UISNR) at various field strengths. METHODS: We calculated the UISNR inside dielectric cylinders mimicking different anatomical regions. We assessed the performance of various arrays with respect to the UISNR. We validated our results by comparing simulated and experimental coil performance maps. RESULTS: Arrays with an increasing number of loops can rapidly approach the UISNR at fields up to 3 T, but are suboptimal at ultrahigh fields for body-size objects. The opposite is true for dipole arrays. At 7 T and above, 16 dipoles provide considerably larger central SNR than any possible loop array, and minimal g factor penalty for parallel imaging. CONCLUSIONS: Electric dipoles can be advantageous at ultrahigh fields because they can produce both curl-free and divergence-free currents, whereas loops are limited to divergence-free contributions only. Combining loops and dipoles may be optimal for body imaging at 3 T, whereas arrays of loops or dipoles alone may perform better at lower or higher field strengths, respectively. Magn Reson Med, 2017. (c) 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
PMCID:5754268
PMID: 28675512
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 2617252

Dynamic phosphocreatine imaging with unlocalized pH assessment of the human lower leg muscle following exercise at 3T

Khegai, Oleksandr; Madelin, Guillaume; Brown, Ryan; Parasoglou, Prodromos
PURPOSE: To develop a high temporal resolution imaging method that measures muscle-specific phosphocreatine (PCr) resynthesis time constant (tauPCr ) and pH changes in muscles of the lower leg following exercise on a clinical 3T MRI scanner. METHODS: We developed a frequency-selective 3D non-Cartesian FLORET sequence to measure PCr with 17-mm nominal isotropic resolution (28 mm actual resolution) and 6-s temporal resolution to capture dynamic metabolic muscle activity. The sequence was designed to additionally collect inorganic phosphate spectra for pH quantification, which were localized using sensitivity profiles of individual coil elements. Nineteen healthy volunteers were scanned while performing a plantar flexion exercise on an in-house developed ergometer. Data were acquired with a dual-tuned multichannel coil array that enabled phosphorus imaging and proton localization for muscle segmentation. RESULTS: After a 90-s plantar flexion exercise at 0.66 Hz with resistance set to 40% of the maximum voluntary contraction, tauPCr was estimated at 22.9 +/- 8.8 s (mean +/- standard deviation) with statistical coefficient of determination r2 = 0.89 +/- 0.05. The corresponding pH values after exercise were in the range of 6.9-7.1 in the gastrocnemius muscle. CONCLUSION: The developed technique allows measurement of muscle-specific PCr resynthesis kinetics and pH changes following exercise, with a temporal resolution and accuracy comparable to that of single voxel 31 P-MRS sequences. Magn Reson Med, 2017. (c) 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
PMCID:5709247
PMID: 28560829
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 2591712