Abstract

The T1 and T2 temperature dependence of female breast adipose tissue was investigated at 1.5 T in order to evaluate the applicability of relaxation-based MR thermometry in fat for the monitoring of thermal therapies in the breast. Relaxation times T1 , T2 and T2TSE (the apparent T2 measured using a turbo spin echo readout sequence) were measured in seven fresh adipose breast samples for temperatures from 25 to 65 °C. Spectral water suppression was used to reduce the influence of the residual water signal. The temperature dependence of the relaxation times was characterized. The expected maximum temperature measurement errors based on average calibration lines were calculated. In addition, the heating-cooling reversibility was investigated for two samples. The T1 and T2TSE temperature (T) dependence could be fitted well with an exponential function of 1/T. A linear relationship between T2 and temperature was found. The temperature coefficients (mean ± inter-sample standard deviation) of T1 and T2TSE increased from 25 °C (dT1/dT = 5.35 ± 0.08 ms/°C, dT2TSE/dT = 3.82 ± 0.06 ms/°C) to 65 °C (dT1 /dT = 9.50 ± 0.16 ms/°C, dT2TSE/dT = 7.99 ± 0.38 ms/°C). The temperature coefficient of T2 was 0.90 ± 0.03 ms/°C. The temperature-induced changes in the relaxation times were found to be reversible after heating to 65 °C. Given the small inter-sample variation of the temperature coefficients, relaxation-based MR thermometry appears to be feasible in breast adipose tissue, and may be used as an adjunct to proton resonance frequency shift (PRFS) thermometry in aqueous tissue (glandular + tumor).

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