New "Gating" Device Improves Imaging of Heart and Lungs
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the heart and lungs is a valuable diagnostic tool in the medical industry, but the detailed images it produces are often marred by artefacts (unwanted signals) created by the motion of cardiac and respiratory cycles.
A team of inventors at Oxford University has now developed a method of suppressing MRI artefacts to a negligible level. This has potential to allow more precise conclusions to be made from a small number of experimental trials, with obvious potential within the pharmaceutical industry, both to accelerate research work and to improve the robustness and quality of screening data upon which key project decisions can be made.
Cardiac and thoracic MRI of small animals, such as mice, requires high spatial resolution in order to resolve fine detail. However, MRI is extremely sensitive to motion from the cardiac and respiratory cycles, which cause severe image artefacts. To reduce these artefacts, synchronisation (gating) to these physiological cycles is required.
Successful gating itself, however, can be difficult to achieve:
· Severe interference from the MR gradient system can cause problems in obtaining clean physiological signals from which gating information is derived.
· Once gating information has been derived, a suitable intra-respiratory acquisition window has to be defined which allows ECGs within the window to be used for MRI signal acquisition.
· Physiological rates of small animals can vary due to changes in thermal or pharmacological response; these variations can invalidate the defined acquisition window, hence introducing motion artefacts.
· Unfortunately, using double-gating (i.e. cardiac and respiratory gating) creates another form of image artefact that has to be minimised.
To overcome these problems, the Oxford team has designed a cardiac and respiratory gating device that is immune from gradient system interference, is adaptive and flexible to changes in physiological rates, and minimises relaxation effects. The inventors have developed a prototype of the device that is capable of minimising image artefacts so that the resultant images are clearer, and therefore significantly better for identification purposes than those obtained using existing methods.
Isis Innovation, Oxford University’s technology transfer company, has filed a patent application on the gating device and is actively looking for companies interested in utilising it.
Media Contact
More Information:
http://www.isis-innovation.com/licensing/1275.htmlAll latest news from the category: Health and Medicine
This subject area encompasses research and studies in the field of human medicine.
Among the wide-ranging list of topics covered here are anesthesiology, anatomy, surgery, human genetics, hygiene and environmental medicine, internal medicine, neurology, pharmacology, physiology, urology and dental medicine.
Newest articles
Breakthrough in magnetism that could transform quantum computing and superconductors
Researchers discover new magnetic and electronic properties in kagome magnet thin films. A discovery by Rice University physicists and collaborators is unlocking a new understanding of magnetism and electronic interactions…
NASA to launch innovative solar coronagraph to Space Station
NASA’s Coronal Diagnostic Experiment (CODEX) is ready to launch to the International Space Station to reveal new details about the solar wind including its origin and its evolution. Launching in…
Boosting efficiency in mining with AI and automation
“Doing instead of procrastinating”. This is the AI strategy presented by Prof. Constantin Haefner, Director of the Fraunhofer Institute for Laser Technology ILT, at the “AKL’24 – International Laser Technology…