Abstract

Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is a tracer-based imaging technique that does not require radiation or a cyclotron. However, it does require bulky MRI-like hardware and does not produce a background tissue image. We propose a new approach to MPI that uses the acoustic radiation force to dynamically move iron nanoparticles through a magnetic field gradient, thereby changing their magnetic moment and producing a detectable signal in a receiver coil. An image could be formed by electronically steering the ultrasound focus to push particles at different spatial locations, like an ultrasonic palpation. This would enable a device that attaches to an ultrasound imaging transducer for simultaneous MPI and inherently registered ultrasound imaging. To test the feasibility of the technique, a cylindrical agar and graphite phantom was placed between a Maxwell coil pair which generated a linear field gradient across it, and particle signals were detected using a receiver solenoid. 2-ms ultrasound pulses were applied using a 6 MHz transducer to generate displacements along the magnetic field gradient. Signal measurements confirmed a lack of signal when iron nanoparticles were absent from the phantom, but the signal was detected when particles were present, with amplitudes that linearly increased with the gradient coil current.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call