## Abstract Magnetic field monitoring with NMR probes has recently been introduced as a means of measuring the actual spatiotemporal magnetic field evolution during individual MR scans. Receive‐only NMR probes as used thus far for this purpose impose significant practical limitations due to radiofr
2H transmit–receive NMR probes for magnetic field monitoring in MRI
✍ Scribed by Pekka Sipilä; Sebastian Greding; Gerhard Wachutka; Florian Wiesinger
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 356 KB
- Volume
- 65
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Measuring image encoding fields in real time and applying the information in postprocessing offer improved image quality for MRI, particularly for applications that are intrinsically sensitive to gradient imperfections. For this task, a stand-alone magnetometer system based on multiple 2 H transmit-receive NMR probes has been developed. The conceptual advantages of changing to 2 H NMR probes for 1 H magnetic field monitoring are elucidated here, and the practical design of the probes is described. In comparison to previous 1 H NMR probe-based designs, 2 H probes are perfectly decoupled from standard 1 H imaging. Utilization of RF shielding or other nonoptimal decoupling schemes is therefore not needed. Probes based on 2 H nuclei are also more easily miniaturized for high-resolution imaging. This is particularly important for diffusion tensor and phase-contrast imaging, which rely on strong motionsensitizing gradients. The presented 2 H NMR probes have been shown to fulfill the requirements for accurate 1 H imaging down to image resolutions of 0.2 mm. Using susceptibility matching techniques, the probe's B 0 inhomogeneity-induced signal dephasing is reduced and monitoring periods beyond 200 msec are achieved. The benefit of real time magnetic field monitoring is highlighted for phase-contrast and non-Cartesian multishot imaging. Magn Reson Med 65:1498-1506, 2011.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract High‐resolution magnetic field probes based on pulsed liquid‐state NMR are presented. Static field measurements with an error of 10 nanotesla or less at 3 tesla are readily obtained in 100 ms. The further ability to measure dynamic magnetic fields results from using small (∼1 μL) drople