International Journal of Hyperthermia (Jan 2021)

Evaluation of an MRI receive head coil for use in transcranial MR guided focused ultrasound for functional neurosurgery

  • Rachel Rinat Bitton,
  • Evgeni Sheingaouz,
  • Benny Assif,
  • Nathaniel Kelm,
  • Mor Dayan,
  • Kim Butts Pauly,
  • Pejman Ghanouni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2020.1867242
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 1
pp. 22 – 29

Abstract

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Background Trans-cranial MR guided focused ultrasound (tcMRgFUS) ablation targets are <5mm from critical neurological structures, creating a need for improved MR imaging and thermometry. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the performance of a dual-channel radiofrequency receive-only head coil designed specifically for integrated use in tcMRgFUS. Methods Imaging used a 3 T MRI and the ExAblate Neuro System (INSIGHTEC Inc., Israel). Sensitivity maps determined receive-only coil uniformity. The head coil was compared to the volume body coil at the level of the thalamus using 1) T2-weighted imaging and 2) multi-echo MR thermometry of volunteers in the transducer helmet. Thermal sonications (40 W, 24s) were acquired in a heating phantom. Thermal maps in were constructed to evaluate temperature uncertainty, focal heating, and temperature evolution. Results The normalized signal intensity showed up to a 35% variation. On T2wFSE images the SNR with the head coil is improved by 4x in the axial plane, and 3x in sagittal and coronal planes. The head coil provided better visualization of the thalamus and globus pallidus (axial), and of the anterior/posterior commissure, and brain stem/cerebellum (sagittal) compared to the body coil. MR thermometry showed a 4x gain in SNR in the thalamus. Thermometry showed a preserved focal spot with 20 °C temperature rise. The average temperature uncertainty (mean ± std) was reduced from σT = 0.96 °C ± 0.55 °C for the body coil to σT = 0.41 °C ± 0.24 °C for the head coil. Conclusions Greater SNR from the dual-channel head coil provides access to better treatment day visualization for treatment planning and higher precision intra-operative thermometry.

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