Abstract

Patients with deep brain stimulation (DBS) implants can significantly benefit from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), however access to MRI is restricted in these patients because of safety concerns due to RF heating of the leads. Recently we introduced a patient-adjustable reconfigurable transmit coil for low-SAR imaging of DBS at 1.5T. A previous simulation study demonstrated a substantial reduction in the local SAR around single DBS leads in 9 unilateral lead models. This work reports the first experimental results of temperature measurement at the tips of bilateral DBS leads with realistic trajectories extracted from postoperative CT images of 10 patients (20 leads in total). A total of 200 measurements were performed to record temperature rise at the tips of the leads during 2 minutes of scanning with the coil rotated to cover all accessible rotation angles. In all patients, we were able to find an optimum coil rotation angle and reduced the heating of both left and right leads to a level below the heating produced by the body coil. An average heat reduction of 65% was achieved for bilateral leads. When considering each lead alone, an average heat reduction of 80% was achieved. Our results suggest that reconfigurable coil technology introduces a promising approach for imaging of patients with DBS implants.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAll other data is already included as tables and graphs in the manuscript

  • In this work we report, for the first time, measurement results of temperature rise at the tips of bilateral Deep brain stimulation (DBS) lead implants with realistic trajectories during magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 1.5 T using the rotating coil system

  • It is important to note that the SAR-reduction performance of the coil and the optimum rotation angle that minimizes the SAR at the tip of each implant is dependent on the lead trajectory [29]. This is in line with previous studies that have emphasized on the importance of the relationship between implant’s geometry, and the phase and orientation of incident electric field of MRI transmit coils [25, 32,33,34,35,36,37]

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Summary

Introduction

All other data is already included as tables and graphs in the manuscript

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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