Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2022)

Evaluation of a Dedicated Radiofrequency Carotid PET/MRI Coil

  • Mueez Aizaz,
  • Jochem A. J. van der Pol,
  • Roel Wierts,
  • Hans Zwart,
  • Abe J. van der Werf,
  • Joachim E. Wildberger,
  • Jan A. Bucerius,
  • Rik P. M. Moonen,
  • Marianne Eline Kooi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11092569
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 2569

Abstract

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Carotid radiofrequency coils inside a PET/MRI system can result in PET quantification errors. We compared the performance of a dedicated PET/MRI carotid coil against a coil for MRI-only use. An 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) phantom was scanned without and with an MRI-only coil and with the PET/MRI coil. The decay-corrected normalized activity was compared for the different coil configurations. Eighteen patients were scanned with the three coil configurations. The maximal standardized uptake values (SUVmax) and signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) were calculated. Repeated measures ANOVA was performed to assess the differences in SUVmax and SNR between the coil configurations. In the phantom study, the PET/MRI coil demonstrated a slight decrease (max values for both no surface coil (3.59 ± 0.15) and PET/MRI coil (3.54 ± 0.15) were significantly higher (p = 0.03 and p = 0.04, respectively) as compared to the MRI-only coil (3.28 ± 0.16). No significant difference was observed between PET/MRI and no surface coil (p = 1.0). The SNR values for both PET/MRI (7.31 ± 0.44) and MRI-only (7.62 ± 0.42) configurations demonstrated significantly higher (p p = 1.0). This study demonstrated that the PET/MRI coil can be used for PET imaging without requiring attenuation correction while acquiring high-resolution MR images.

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