Title :
Referenceless MR Thermometry for Monitoring Thermal Ablation in the Prostate
Author :
Rieke, Viola ; Kinsey, Adam M. ; Ross, Anthony B. ; Nau, William H. ; Diederich, Chris J. ; Sommer, Graham ; Pauly, Kim Butts
Author_Institution :
Stanford Univ., Stanford
fDate :
6/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Referenceless proton resonance frequency (PRF) shift thermometry provides a means to measure temperature changes during minimally invasive thermotherapy that is inherently robust to motion and tissue displacement. However, if the referenceless method is used to determine temperature changes during prostate ablation, phase gaps between water and fat in image regions used to determine the background phase can confound the phase estimation. We demonstrate an extension to referenceless thermometry which eliminates this problem by allowing background phase estimation in the presence of phase discontinuities between aqueous and fatty tissue. In this method, images are acquired with a multi-echo sequence and binary water and fat maps are generated from a Dixon reconstruction. For the background phase estimation, water and fat regions are treated separately and the phase offset between the two tissue types is determined. The method is demonstrated feasibile in phantoms and during in vivo thermal ablation of canine prostate.
Keywords :
biological organs; biological tissues; biomedical MRI; hyperthermia; patient monitoring; phantoms; phase estimation; surgery; temperature measurement; Dixon reconstruction; aqueous tissue; background phase estimation; canine prostate; fatty tissue; magnetic resonance imaging; minimally invasive thermotherapy; multiecho sequence image; phantoms; proton resonance frequency shift; referenceless MR thermometry; thermal ablation monitoring; Displacement measurement; Frequency measurement; Minimally invasive surgery; Monitoring; Motion measurement; Phase estimation; Protons; Resonance; Resonant frequency; Temperature measurement; Interventional; magnetic resonance; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); prostate; temperature; thermal ablation; thermometry; Animals; Dogs; Hyperthermia, Induced; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Prostate; Reference Values; Thermography;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2007.892647