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Stereotactic radiosurgery planning of vestibular schwannomas: Is MRI at 3 Tesla geometrically accurate?
Author(s) -
Schmidt M. A.,
Wells E. J.,
Davison K.,
Riddell A. M.,
Welsh L.,
Saran F.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1002/mp.12068
Subject(s) - nuclear medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , magnetostatics , isotropy , radiosurgery , distortion (music) , computer science , physics , bandwidth (computing) , magnetic field , radiology , medicine , optics , quantum mechanics , radiation therapy , amplifier , computer network
Purpose MRI is a mandatory requirement to accurately plan Stereotactic Radiosurgery ( SRS ) for Vestibular Schwannomas. However, MRI may be distorted due not only to inhomogeneity of the static magnetic field and gradients but also due to susceptibility‐induced effects, which are more prominent at higher magnetic fields. We assess geometrical distortions around air spaces and consider MRI protocol requirements for SRS planning at 3 T. Methods Hardware‐related distortion and the effect of incorrect shimming were investigated with structured test objects. The magnetic field was mapped over the head on five volunteers to assess susceptibility‐related distortion in the naso‐oro‐pharyngeal cavities ( NOPC ) and around the internal ear canal ( IAC ). Results Hardware‐related geometric displacements were found to be less than 0.45 mm within the head volume, after distortion correction. Shimming errors can lead to displacements of up to 4 mm, but errors of this magnitude are unlikely to arise in practice. Susceptibility‐related field inhomogeneity was under 3.4 ppm, 2.8 ppm, and 2.7 ppm for the head, NOPC region and IAC region, respectively. For the SRS planning protocol (890 Hz/pixel, approximately 1 mm 3 isotropic), susceptibility‐related displacements were less than 0.5 mm (head), and 0.4 mm ( IAC and NOPC ). Large displacements are possible in MRI examinations undertaken with lower receiver bandwidth values, commonly used in clinical MRI . Higher receiver bandwidth makes the protocol less vulnerable to sub‐optimal shimming. The shimming volume and the CT ‐ MR co‐registration must be considered jointly. Conclusion Geometric displacements can be kept under 1 mm in the vicinity of air spaces within the head at 3 T with appropriate setting of the receiver bandwidth, correct shimming and employing distortion correction.

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