Title :
Magnetic resonance image enhancement by reducing receptors´ effective size and enabling multiple channel acquisition
Author :
Yepes-Calderon, Fernando ; Velasquez, Adriana ; Lepore, Natasha ; Beuf, Olivier
Author_Institution :
Univ. de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract :
Magnetic resonance imaging is empowered by parallel reading, which reduces acquisition time dramatically. The time saved by parallelization can be used to increase image quality or to enable specialized scanning protocols in clinical and research environments. In small animals, the sizing constraints render the use of multi-channeled approaches even more necessary, as they help to improve the typically low spatial resolution and lesser signal-to-noise ratio; however, the use of multiple channels also generates mutual induction (MI) effects that impairs imaging creation. Here, we created coils and used the shared capacitor technique to diminish first degree MI effects and pre-amplifiers to deal with higher order MI-related image deterioration. The constructed devices are tested by imaging phantoms that contain identical solutions; thus, creating the conditions for several statistical comparisons. We confirm that the shared capacitor strategy can recover the receptor capacity in compounded coils when working at the dimensions imposed by small animal imaging. Additionally, we demonstrate that the use of pre-amplifiers does not significantly reduce the quality of the images. Moreover, in light of our results, the two MI-avoiding techniques can be used together, therefore establishing the practical feasibility of flexible array coils populated with multiple loops for small animal imaging.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; biomedical equipment; capacitors; coils; image denoising; image enhancement; image resolution; medical image processing; phantoms; preamplifiers; acquisition time; clinical environments; compounded coils; effective size reducing receptors; flexible array coils; high-order MI-related image deterioration; image quality; imaging creation; imaging phantoms; magnetic resonance image enhancement; multiple channel acquisition; multiple loops; mutual induction; parallel reading; parallelization; preamplifiers; receptor capacity; research environments; shared capacitor technique; signal-to-noise ratio; small animal imaging; spatial resolution; specialized scanning protocols; statistical comparisons; Animals; Capacitors; Coils; Magnetic resonance imaging; Signal to noise ratio; Stability analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6944110