Abstract

The purpose of this study was to develop steerable MR-compatible ultrasound catheters suitable for minimally invasive MRI-guided cardiac ablation therapies. MRI-compatible ultrasound steerable catheters were developed and tested for their overall tissue heating performance and safety. Ultrasound transducers were mounted on a monodirectional deflectable catheter tip that was made to be MRI-compatible. Catheter safety was assessed on the potential to form hot spots at the distal end of the catheter throughout fast spin echo and thermometry scans. Heating experiments were performed on phantoms and ex vivo porcine cardiac samples. During catheter safety experiments, a maximum temperature increase of 11.35 ± 0.83°C was evident after a 12-min, 40-s fast spin echo scan with a whole body specific absorption rate (SAR) of 1.9 W/kg and 1.07 ± 0.22°C during thermometry scans (flip angle = 90°; scan time = 12 min, 41 s; whole body SAR = 0.34 W/kg). Temperature elevations induced by the sonication were shown to be on the order of 38.1 ± 5.2°C for phantom experiments and 49.3 ± 9.7°C for ex vivo cardiac samples. Steerable ultrasound catheters have the potential to be safely placed in an MR system with little concern of catheter self-heating and driven to heat surrounding structures to cause ablations. In addition, these catheters have the added benefit of a deflectable tip that allows the treatment of multiple targets from within the bore of the MR scanner.

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