Saline bolus for negative contrast perfusion imaging in magnetic particle imaging

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Saline bolus for negative contrast perfusion imaging in magnetic particle imaging. / Mohn, Fabian; Exner, Miriam; Szwargulski, Patryk; Möddel, Martin; Knopp, Tobias; Graeser, Matthias.

in: PHYS MED BIOL, Jahrgang 68, Nr. 17, 175026, 22.08.2023.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{cec8cb720dd94d868f0ea008e2abf3f4,
title = "Saline bolus for negative contrast perfusion imaging in magnetic particle imaging",
abstract = "Objective.Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is capable of high temporal resolution measurements of the spatial distribution of magnetic nanoparticles and therefore well suited for perfusion imaging, which is an important tool in medical diagnosis. Perfusion imaging in MPI usually requires a fresh bolus of tracer material to capture the key signal dynamics. Here, we propose a method to decouple the imaging sequence from the injection of additional tracer material, without further increasing the administered iron dose in the body with each image.Approach.A bolus of physiological saline solution without any particles (negative contrast) diminishes the steady-state concentration of a long-circulating tracer during passage. This depression in the measured concentration contributes to the required contrast dynamics. The presence of a long-circulating tracer is therefore a prerequisite to obtain the negative contrast. As a quantitative tracer based imaging method, the signal is linear in the tracer concentration for any location that contains nanoparticles and zero in the surrounding tissue which does not provide any intrinsic signal. After tracer injection, the concentration over time (positive contrast) can be utilized to calculate dynamic diagnostic parameters like perfusion parameters in vessels and organs. Every acquired perfusion image thus requires a new bolus of tracer with a sufficiently large iron dose to be visible above the background.Main results.Perfusion parameters are calculated based on the time response of the proposed negative bolus and compared to a positive bolus. Results from phantom experiments show that normalized signals from positive and negative boli are concurrent and deviations of calculated perfusion maps are low.Significance.Our method opens up the possibility to increase the total monitoring time of a future patient by utilizing a positive-negative contrast sequence, while minimizing the iron dose per acquired image.",
keywords = "Humans, Saline Solution, Contrast Media, Iron, Perfusion Imaging, Magnetic Phenomena",
author = "Fabian Mohn and Miriam Exner and Patryk Szwargulski and Martin M{\"o}ddel and Tobias Knopp and Matthias Graeser",
note = "Creative Commons Attribution license.",
year = "2023",
month = aug,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1088/1361-6560/ace309",
language = "English",
volume = "68",
journal = "PHYS MED BIOL",
issn = "0031-9155",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd.",
number = "17",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Saline bolus for negative contrast perfusion imaging in magnetic particle imaging

AU - Mohn, Fabian

AU - Exner, Miriam

AU - Szwargulski, Patryk

AU - Möddel, Martin

AU - Knopp, Tobias

AU - Graeser, Matthias

N1 - Creative Commons Attribution license.

PY - 2023/8/22

Y1 - 2023/8/22

N2 - Objective.Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is capable of high temporal resolution measurements of the spatial distribution of magnetic nanoparticles and therefore well suited for perfusion imaging, which is an important tool in medical diagnosis. Perfusion imaging in MPI usually requires a fresh bolus of tracer material to capture the key signal dynamics. Here, we propose a method to decouple the imaging sequence from the injection of additional tracer material, without further increasing the administered iron dose in the body with each image.Approach.A bolus of physiological saline solution without any particles (negative contrast) diminishes the steady-state concentration of a long-circulating tracer during passage. This depression in the measured concentration contributes to the required contrast dynamics. The presence of a long-circulating tracer is therefore a prerequisite to obtain the negative contrast. As a quantitative tracer based imaging method, the signal is linear in the tracer concentration for any location that contains nanoparticles and zero in the surrounding tissue which does not provide any intrinsic signal. After tracer injection, the concentration over time (positive contrast) can be utilized to calculate dynamic diagnostic parameters like perfusion parameters in vessels and organs. Every acquired perfusion image thus requires a new bolus of tracer with a sufficiently large iron dose to be visible above the background.Main results.Perfusion parameters are calculated based on the time response of the proposed negative bolus and compared to a positive bolus. Results from phantom experiments show that normalized signals from positive and negative boli are concurrent and deviations of calculated perfusion maps are low.Significance.Our method opens up the possibility to increase the total monitoring time of a future patient by utilizing a positive-negative contrast sequence, while minimizing the iron dose per acquired image.

AB - Objective.Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is capable of high temporal resolution measurements of the spatial distribution of magnetic nanoparticles and therefore well suited for perfusion imaging, which is an important tool in medical diagnosis. Perfusion imaging in MPI usually requires a fresh bolus of tracer material to capture the key signal dynamics. Here, we propose a method to decouple the imaging sequence from the injection of additional tracer material, without further increasing the administered iron dose in the body with each image.Approach.A bolus of physiological saline solution without any particles (negative contrast) diminishes the steady-state concentration of a long-circulating tracer during passage. This depression in the measured concentration contributes to the required contrast dynamics. The presence of a long-circulating tracer is therefore a prerequisite to obtain the negative contrast. As a quantitative tracer based imaging method, the signal is linear in the tracer concentration for any location that contains nanoparticles and zero in the surrounding tissue which does not provide any intrinsic signal. After tracer injection, the concentration over time (positive contrast) can be utilized to calculate dynamic diagnostic parameters like perfusion parameters in vessels and organs. Every acquired perfusion image thus requires a new bolus of tracer with a sufficiently large iron dose to be visible above the background.Main results.Perfusion parameters are calculated based on the time response of the proposed negative bolus and compared to a positive bolus. Results from phantom experiments show that normalized signals from positive and negative boli are concurrent and deviations of calculated perfusion maps are low.Significance.Our method opens up the possibility to increase the total monitoring time of a future patient by utilizing a positive-negative contrast sequence, while minimizing the iron dose per acquired image.

KW - Humans

KW - Saline Solution

KW - Contrast Media

KW - Iron

KW - Perfusion Imaging

KW - Magnetic Phenomena

U2 - 10.1088/1361-6560/ace309

DO - 10.1088/1361-6560/ace309

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 37609892

VL - 68

JO - PHYS MED BIOL

JF - PHYS MED BIOL

SN - 0031-9155

IS - 17

M1 - 175026

ER -