Title :
The X-Space Formulation of the Magnetic Particle Imaging Process: 1-D Signal, Resolution, Bandwidth, SNR, SAR, and Magnetostimulation
Author :
Goodwill, Patrick W. ; Conolly, Steven M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Bioeng., Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract :
The magnetic particle imaging (MPI) imaging process is a new method of medical imaging with great promise. In this paper we derive the 1-D MPI signal, resolution, bandwidth requirements, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), specific absorption rate, and slew rate limitations. We conclude with experimental data measuring the point spread function for commercially available SPIO nanoparticles and a demonstration of the principles behind 1-D imaging using a static offset field. Despite arising from the nonlinear temporal response of a magnetic nanoparticle to a changing magnetic field, the imaging process is linear in the magnetization distribution and can be described as a convolution. Reconstruction in one dimension is exact and has a well-behaved quasi-Lorentzian point spread function. The spatial resolution improves cubically with increasing diameter of the SPIO domain, inverse to absolute temperature, linearly with saturation magnetization, and inversely with gradient. The bandwidth requirements approach a megahertz for reasonable imaging parameters and millimeter scale resolutions, and the SNR increases with the scanning rate. The limit to SNR as we scale MPI to human sizes will be patient heating. SAR and magnetostimulation limits give us surprising relations between optimal scanning speeds and scanning frequency for different types of scanners.
Keywords :
biomagnetism; biomedical imaging; image reconstruction; image resolution; magnetisation; medical image processing; nanobiotechnology; nanoparticles; 1D imaging; 1D signal; SPIO nanoparticles; bandwidth requirements; magnetic particle imaging process X-space formulation; magnetization distribution; magnetostimulation; nonlinear temporal response; patient heating; point spread function; saturation magnetization; scanning frequency; signal-to-noise ratio; slew rate limitations; specific absorption rate; well-behaved quasiLorentzian point spread function; Bandwidth; Biomedical imaging; Image resolution; Magnetic field measurement; Magnetic particles; Nanoparticles; Saturation magnetization; Signal processing; Signal resolution; Spatial resolution; Biomedical imaging; magnetic particle imaging; signal detection; x-space; Algorithms; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Magnetite Nanoparticles; Molecular Imaging; Molecular Probe Techniques; Phantoms, Imaging; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2010.2052284