Journal of Magnetic Resonance Open (Dec 2023)

Inductively coupled, transmit-receive coils for proton MRI and X-nucleus MRI/MRS in small animals

  • Atsushi M. Takahashi,
  • Jitendra Sharma,
  • David O. Guarin,
  • Julie Miller,
  • Hiroaki Wakimoto,
  • Daniel P. Cahill,
  • Yi-Fen Yen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16
p. 100123

Abstract

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We report several inductively coupled RF coil designs that are very easy to construct, produce high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and high spatial resolution while accommodating life support, anesthesia and monitoring in small animals. Inductively coupled surface coils were designed for hyperpolarized 13 C MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) of mouse brain, with emphases on the simplicity of the circuit design, ease of use, whole-brain coverage, and high SNR. The simplest form was a resonant loop designed to crown the mouse head for a snug fit to achieve full coverage of the brain with high sensitivity when inductively coupled to a broadband pick-up coil. Here, we demonstrated the coil's performance in hyperpolarized 13 C MRSI of a normal mouse and a glioblastoma mouse model at 4.7 T. High SNR exceeding 70:1 was obtained in the brain with good spatial resolution (1.53 mm x 1.53 mm). Similar inductively coupled loop for other X-nuclei can be made very easily in a few minutes and achieve high performance, as demonstrated in 31 P spectroscopy. Similar design concept was expanded to splitable, inductively coupled volume coils for high-resolution proton MRI of marmoset at 3T and 9.4T, to easily accommodate head restraint, vital-sign monitoring, and anesthesia delivery.

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