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Performance of a miniature high‐temperature superconducting (HTS) surface coil for in vivo microimaging of the mouse in a standard 1.5T clinical whole‐body scanner
Author(s) -
PoirierQuinot Marie,
Ginefri JeanChristophe,
Girard Olivier,
Robert Philippe,
Darrasse Luc
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.21605
Subject(s) - electromagnetic coil , scanner , voxel , image quality , materials science , radiofrequency coil , biomedical engineering , image resolution , whole body imaging , noise (video) , in vivo , nuclear magnetic resonance , nuclear medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , optics , physics , radiology , medicine , computer science , microbiology and biotechnology , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , biology , image (mathematics)
The performance of a 12‐mm high‐temperature superconducting (HTS) surface coil for in vivo microimaging of mice in a standard 1.5T clinical whole‐body scanner was investigated. Systematic evaluation of MR image quality was conducted on saline phantoms with various conductivities to derive the sensitivity improvement brought by the HTS coil compared with a similar room‐temperature copper coil. The observed signal‐to‐noise ratio (SNR) was correlated to the loaded quality factor of the radio frequency (RF) coils and is theoretically validated with respect to the noise contribution of the MR acquisition channel. The expected in vivo SNR gain was then extrapolated for different anatomical sites by monitoring the quality factor in situ during animal imaging experiments. Typical SNR gains of 9.8, 9.8, 5.4, and 11.6 were found for brain, knee, back, and subcutaneous implanted tumors, respectively, over a series of mice. Excellent in vivo image quality was demonstrated in 16 min with native voxels down to (59 μm) 3 with an SNR of 20. The HTS coil technology opens the way, for the first time at the current field strength of clinical MR scanners, to spatial resolutions below 10 –3 mm 3 in living mice, which until now were only accessible to specialized high‐field MR microscopes. Magn Reson Med 60:917–927, 2008. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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