A pathway towards a two-dimensional bore-mounted volume body coil concept for ultra-high field MRI. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Lack of a body-sized, bore-mounted, radiofrequency (RF) body coil for ultra-high field (UHF) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is one of the major drawbacks of UHF, hampering the clinical potential of the technology. Transmit field (B1 ) nonuniformity and low specific absorption rate (SAR) efficiencies in UHF MRI are two challenges to be overcome. To address these problems, and ultimately provide a pathway for the full clinical potential of the modality, we have designed and simulated two-dimensional (2D) cylindrical high-pass ladder (2D c-HPL) architectures for clinical bore-size dimensions, and demonstrated a simplified proof of concept with a head-sized prototype at 7 T. A new dispersion relation has been derived and electromagnetic simulations were used to verify coil modes. The coefficient of variation (CV) for brain, cerebellum, heart, and prostate tissues after B1 + shimming in-silico is reported and compared to previous works. Three prototypes were designed in simulation: a head-sized, body-sized, and long body-sized coil. The head-sized coil showed a CV of 12.3%, a B1 + efficiency of 1.33 μT/√W, and a SAR efficiency of 2.14 μT/√(W/kg) for brain simulations. The body-sized 2D c-HPL coil was compared to same-sized transverse electromagnetic (TEM) and birdcage coils in-silico with a four-port circularly polarized (CP) mode excitation. Improved B1 + uniformity (26.9%) and SAR efficiency (16% and 50% better than birdcage and TEM coils, respectively) in spherical phantoms is observed. We achieve a CV of 12.3%, 4.9%, 16.7%, and 2.8% for the brain, cerebellum, heart, and prostate, respectively. Preliminary imaging results for the head-sized coil show good agreement between simulation and experiment. Extending the 1D birdcage coil concept to 2D c-HPLs provides improved B1 + uniformity and SAR efficiency.

publication date

  • July 14, 2022

Research

keywords

  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Radio Waves

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1002/nbm.4802

PubMed ID

  • 35834176