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Intravascular extended sensitivity (IVES) MRI antennas

✍ Scribed by Robert C. Susil; Christopher J. Yeung; Ergin Atalar


Book ID
102953440
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
924 KB
Volume
50
Category
Article
ISSN
0740-3194

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The design and application of an intravascular extended sensitivity (IVES) MRI antenna is described. The device is a loopless antenna design that incorporates both an insulating, dielectric coating and a winding of the antenna whip into a helical shape. Because this antenna produces a broad region of high SNR and also allows for imaging near the tip of the device, it is useful for imaging long, luminal structures. To elucidate the design and function of this device, the effects of both insulation and antenna winding were characterized by theoretical and experimental studies. Insulation broadens the longitudinal region over which images can be collected (i.e., along the lumen of a vessel) by increasing the resonant pole length. Antenna winding, conversely, allows for imaging closer to the tip of the antenna by decreasing the resonant pole length. Over a longitudinal region of 20 cm, the IVES imaging antenna described here produces a system SNR of approximately 40,000/r (mL^–1^Hz^1/2^), where r is the radial distance from the antenna axis in centimeters. As opposed to microcoil antenna designs, these antennas do not require exact positioning and allow for imaging over broad tissue regions. While focusing on the design of the IVES antenna, this work also serves to enhance our overall understanding of the properties and behavior of the loopless antenna design. Magn Reson Med 50:383–390, 2003. Β© 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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The ''loopless antenna'' is an interventional MRI detector consisting of a tuned coaxial cable and an extended inner conductor or ''whip''. A limitation is the poor sensitivity afforded at, and immediately proximal to, its distal end, which is exacerbated by the extended whip length when the whip is