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Advanced MRI techniques for transcranial high intensity focused ultrasound targeting
Author(s) -
Bhavya Shah,
Vance T. Lehman,
Timothy J. Kaufmann,
Daniel J. Blezek,
Jeff L. Waugh,
Darren Imphean,
Frank F. Yu,
Toral Patel,
Shilpa Chitnis,
Richard B. Dewey,
Joseph A. Maldjian,
Rajiv Chopra
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awaa107
Subject(s) - magnetic resonance imaging , quantitative susceptibility mapping , deep brain stimulation , diffusion mri , tractography , susceptibility weighted imaging , essential tremor , neuroscience , subthalamic nucleus , medicine , radiology , parkinson's disease , biology , pathology , disease
Magnetic resonance guided high intensity focused ultrasound is a novel, non-invasive, image-guided procedure that is able to ablate intracranial tissue with submillimetre precision. It is currently FDA approved for essential tremor and tremor dominant Parkinson’s disease. The aim of this update is to review the limitations of current landmark-based targeting techniques of the ventral intermediate nucleus and demonstrate the role of emerging imaging techniques that are relevant for both magnetic resonance guided high intensity focused ultrasound and deep brain stimulation. A significant limitation of standard MRI sequences is that the ventral intermediate nucleus, dentatorubrothalamic tract, and other deep brain nuclei cannot be clearly identified. This paper provides original, annotated images demarcating the ventral intermediate nucleus, dentatorubrothalamic tract, and other deep brain nuclei on advanced MRI sequences such as fast grey matter acquisition T1 inversion recovery, quantitative susceptibility mapping, susceptibility weighted imaging, and diffusion tensor imaging tractography. Additionally, the paper reviews clinical efficacy of targeting with these novel MRI techniques when compared to current established landmark-based targeting techniques. The paper has widespread applicability to both deep brain stimulation and magnetic resonance guided high intensity focused ultrasound.

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