Abstract
Visualizing the movement of angiocatheters during endovascular interventions is typically accomplished using x-ray fluoroscopy. There are many potential advantages to developing magnetic resonance imaging-based approaches that will allow three-dimensional imaging of the tissue/vasculature interface while monitoring other physiologically-relevant criteria, without exposing the patient or clinician team to ionizing radiation. Here we introduce a proof-of-concept development of a magnetic resonance imaging-guided catheter tracking method that utilizes hyperpolarized silicon particles. The increased signal of the silicon particles is generated via low-temperature, solid-state dynamic nuclear polarization, and the particles retain their enhanced signal for ≥40 minutes - allowing imaging experiments over extended time durations. The particles are affixed to the tip of standard medical-grade catheters and are used to track passage under set distal and temporal points in phantoms and live mouse models. With continued development, this method has the potential to supplement x-ray fluoroscopy and other MRI-guided catheter tracking methods as a zero-background, positive contrast agent that does not require ionizing radiation.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Whiting, N., Hu, J., Shah, J. V., Cassidy, M. C., Cressman, E., Millward, N. Z., … Bhattacharya, P. K. (2015). Real-Time MRI-Guided Catheter Tracking Using Hyperpolarized Silicon Particles. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep12842
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.