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RF heating due to conductive wires during MRI depends on the phase distribution of the transmit field

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


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
74 KB
Volume
48
Category
Article
ISSN
0740-3194

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✦ Synopsis


In many studies concerning wire heating during MR imaging, a "resonant wire length" that maximizes RF heating is determined. This may lead to the nonintuitive conclusion that adding more wire, so as to avoid this resonant length, will actually improve heating safety. Through a theoretical analysis using the method of moments, we show that this behavior depends on the phase distribution of the RF transmit field. If the RF transmit field has linear phase, with slope equal to the real part of the wavenumber in the tissue, long wires always heat more than short wires. In order to characterize the intrinsic safety of a device without reference to a specific body coil design, this maximum-tip heating phase distribution must be considered. Finally, adjusting the phase distribution of the electric field generated by an RF transmit coil may lead to an "implant-friendly" coil design.