Passive catheter tracking during interventional MRI using hyperpolarized 13C

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Abstract

Interventional procedures in MRI can be performed preclinically using active or passive catheter-tracking methods. A novel passive nonproton technique is suggested that uses a catheter filled with a hyperpolarized 13C contrast agent. A prototype three-lumen catheter was built with two closed lumens containing a flowing hyperpolarized 13C contrast agent. Entire-length 13C catheter projection visualization could be performed in vivo with a catheter SNR of ∼80, one dual projection frame per ∼700 ms, and an in-plane resolution of 2 x 2 mm2 while traveling through the aorta of a pig. The traveling path of the 13C catheter was visualized after back-projection catheter reconstruction and after image fusion with an anatomical offline proton road map. Catheter length visualization was aided by an oblique planar visualization mode. The high catheter signal demonstrated, together with the entire catheter length visualization and high surrounding soft-tissue contrast, warrants further development into a real-time technique. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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APA

Magnusson, P., Johansson, E., Månsson, S., Petersson, J. S., Chai, C. M., Hansson, G., … Golman, K. (2007). Passive catheter tracking during interventional MRI using hyperpolarized 13C. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 57(6), 1140–1147. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.21239

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