Title :
Total Iron-Overload Measurement in the Human Liver Region by the Magnetic Iron Detector
Author :
Marinelli, M. ; Gianesin, B. ; Balocco, M. ; Beruto, P. ; Bruzzone, C. ; Carrara, P. ; Gallusi, P. ; Macco, A. ; Musso, M. ; Oliveri, E. ; Pelucchi, S. ; Sobrero, G. ; Villa, R. ; Forni, G.L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Univ. of Genoa, Genoa, Italy
Abstract :
An accurate assessment of body iron accumulation is essential for the diagnosis and therapy of iron overload in diseases, such as hemochromatosis, thalassemia and other forms of severe anemias. The magnetic iron detector (MID) is a room-temperature susceptometer, which measures the total iron overload in the liver. Since February 2005, about 600 patients have been assessed using this device. The iron overload is obtained by calculating the difference between the measured magnetization signal of the patient and the patient´s background signal. The latter is the magnetization signal that the patient would generate with normal iron content. This study presents the method for calculating the background signal of healthy volunteers and the application of the same method to patients with iron burden in order to evaluate their overload. The present MID sensitivity is 0.8 g and the reproducibility of the iron overload measurement of the same patients is lower than 0.5 g. The MID does not require calibration with liver biopsies. We correlated the MID measurements with the results of 26 biopsies (R = 0.62), 64 superconducting quantum interference device susceptometer measurements (R = 0.79), 666 serum ferritin concentration measurements (R = 0.72), and 41 MRI-R2* measurements (R = 0.71).
Keywords :
SQUID magnetometers; biomagnetism; biomedical equipment; biomedical measurement; diseases; iron; liver; magnetic susceptibility; magnetisation; Fe; SQUID susceptometer; body iron accumulation assessment; hemochromatosis; human liver; iron overload diagnosis; iron overload therapy; magnetic iron detector; measured magnetization signal; patient background magnetization signal; room temperature susceptometer; serum ferritin concentration; severe anemia; superconducting quantum interference device; thalassemia; total iron overload measurement; Iron overload; MID susceptometer; liver iron concentration (LIC); magnetic iron detector (MID); thalassemia; Abdomen; Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Female; Humans; Iron; Iron Overload; Linear Models; Liver; Magnetics; Male; Middle Aged; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2010.2053204