Convection-reaction equation based magnetic resonance electrical properties tomography (cr-MREPT)

Date

2013

Editor(s)

Advisor

İder, Y. Ziya

Supervisor

Co-Advisor

Co-Supervisor

Instructor

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Abstract

Tomographic imaging of electrical conductivity and permittivity of tissues may be used for diagnostic purposes as well as for estimating local specific absorption rate (SAR) distributions. Magnetic Resonance Electrical Properties Tomography (MREPT) aims at noninvasively obtaining conductivity and permittivity images at RF frequencies of MRI systems. MREPT algorithms are based on measuring the B1 field which is perturbed by the electrical properties of the imaged object. In this study, the relation between the electrical properties and the measured B + 1 field is formulated, for the first time as, the well-known convection-reaction equation. The suggested novel algorithm, called “cr-MREPT”, is based on the solution of this equation, and in contrast to previously proposed algorithms, it is applicable in practice not only for regions where electrical properties are relatively constant but also for regions where they vary. The convection-reaction equation is solved using a triangular mesh based finite difference method and also finite element method (FEM). The convective field of the convection-reaction equation depends on the spatial derivatives of the B + 1 field. In the regions where the magnitude of convective field is low, a spot-like artifact is observed in the reconstructed conductivity and dielectric permittivity images. For eliminating this artifact, two different methods are developed, namely “constrained cr-MREPT” and “double-excitation cr-MREPT”. In the constrained cr-MREPT method, in the region where the magnitude of convective field is low, the electrical properties are reconstructed by neglecting the convective term in the equation. The obtained solution is used as a constraint for solving electrical properties in the whole domain. In the double-excitation cr-MREPT method, two B1 excitations, which create two convective field distributions having low magnitude of convective field in different locations, are applied separately. The electrical properties are then reconstructed simultaneously using data from these two applied B + 1 field. These methods are tested with both simulation and experimental data from phantoms. As seen from results, successful electrical property reconstructions are obtained in all regions including electrical property transition region. The performance of cr-MREPT method against noise is also investigated.

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Book Title

Degree Discipline

Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Degree Level

Master's

Degree Name

MS (Master of Science)

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

Language

English

Type