Claims
- 1. A microbubble for use in sensitivity enhanced magnetic resonance manometry, comprising a lipid shell having a high magnetic susceptibility.
- 2. A microbubble for sensitivity enhanced magnetic resonance manometry, comprising a lipid shell including magnetic nanoparticles having high dipole moments embedded therein.
- 3. The microbubble according to claim 2 wherein said lipid shell includes a substantially continuous coating of said magnetic nanoparticles.
- 4. The microbubble according to claim 2 wherein said magnetic nanoparticles are uniformly distributed over the surface of said lipid shell.
- 5. The microbubble according to claim 2 wherein said magnetic nanoparticles are non-uniformly distributed over the surface of said lipid shell.
- 6. The microbubble according to claim 2 wherein a preselected volume fraction of the magnetic nanoparticles are present on the microbubble shell for reducing the microbubble dose well below 1 cc/kg.
- 7. The microbubble according to claim 1 that are stabilized by encapsulating gases of low permeability across the lipid membrane.
- 8. A microbubble for sensitivity enhanced magnetic resonance manometry, comprising a lipid shell including a magnetically active agent attached to, or incorporated into, the surface of the bubble to give said microbubble a preselected magnetic susceptibility.
- 9. A use of coated microbubbles to decrease microbubble dose necessary to detect a desired pressure change in the circulation by improving the measurement accuracy of the MR signal decay rate constant related to blood oxygen effect and dipole-dipole coupling of water protons.
- 10. A magnetic resonance imaging method for measuring intravascular or intracardiac pressure in a patient, the method comprising the steps of;
a) intravenously administering microbubbles to a patient, said microbubbles comprising a lipid shell having a high magnetic susceptibility; b) performing cardiac-gated, flow and/or motion compensated magnetic resonance imaging to establish microbubble concentration dependent and pressure independent magnetic resonance (MR) signal decay in a major blood vessel or in a sample of blood drawn from said patient; and c) measuring the magnetic resonance signal in a region of interest in the patient's body, comparing a difference between pressure independent magnetic resonance signal and pressure dependent magnetic resonance signal to a calibration curve between magnetic resonance signal decay and pressure to determine the pressure in the region of interest.
- 11. The method according to claim 10 wherein said major blood vessel is the brachiocephalic vein or a vein where the pressure is nearly zero relative to atmospheric pressure.
- 12. The method according to claim 10 wherein said region of interest in the patient's body is the patient's cardiac chamber or a selected part of the patient's vascular system.
- 13. The method according to claim 10 wherein the step of performing cardiac-gated, flow and/or motion compensated magnetic resonance imaging includes applying a pulse sequence beginning with a 90x excitation pulse followed by a train of 180y refocusing pulses, which are equally separated by a refocusing interval termed τ180, performing spatial localization using a final slice-selective pulse followed by an imaging gradient, acquiring a series of T2-weighted images with the pulse sequence in which the duration of the refocusing train is set to different values by changing the number of refocusing pulses used, and estimating R2Blood by extracting the signal amplitude within the blood vessel and fitting the data points using an effective function.
- 14. The method according to claim 13 wherein the effective function is a monoexponential decay function using a weighted least squares fit.
- 15. The method according to claim 13 wherein the excitation pulse and refocusing train are non-selective to minimize flow sensitivity when using this pulse sequence whereby substantially no gradients applied so that no moments to be nulled.
- 16. The method according to claim 13 wherein in the implementation of a T2-weighted magnetization preparation the T2-weighted magnetization produced by the train of 180y refocusing pulses is returned to a longitudinal axis at the echo of the final refocusing pulse, and wherein manipulation of T2 contrast from the transverse plane back to the longitudinal axis is achieved using a 90-x tip-up pulse, including at this time applying a spoiler gradient along the slice-select axis to dephase any residual transverse magnetization.
- 17. The method according to claim 16 wherein the T2 preparation segment is followed by an imaging pulse sequence in which a series of tip-up angle RF excitations follow the tip-up RF pulse at the completion of the T2 preparation segment.
- 18. The method according to claim 13 wherein different slices or different parts of k-space may be acquired after each small tip angle RF excitation pulse.
- 19. The method according to claim 18 wherein a single slice imaging pulse sequence is used in which a spectrally and spatially selective RF excitation pulse and spiral interleaf readout is employed whereby because the spectral-spatial RF pulse selectively excites water while isolating the slice of interest, this sequence rejects lipids.
- 20. The method according to claim 16 wherein the refocusing pulse trains comprise a pattern of 90x-180y-90x composite refocusing pulses wherein all pulses are rectangular and non-selective with γB1/2 π<1 kHz.
- 21. The method according to claim 20 wherein when composite refocusing pulses are used, including compensating for T1 signal decay effects during each refocusing pulse.
- 22. The method according to claim 21 wherein compensating for T1 signal decay effects during each refocusing pulse includes one or more of decreasing the pulse duration, increasing the refocusing interval, or using post-processing methods.
- 23. The method according to claim 21 wherein effects of RF field offsets on the 90x/90-x excitation/tip-up pulse pair is compensated for by using phase-cycling methods which subtract out a T1 bias or by using composite 90° excitation and tip-up pulses which ensure an efficient manipulation of magnetization between the transverse plane and the longitudinal axis.
- 24. The method according to claim 23 wherein said excitation pulse is 360x-270x-90y are used as excitation pulses and 45-x-90-y-90-x-45y pulses are used for the for tip-up pulses for providing dual RF and static field insensitivity without substantially increasing imaging time.
- 25. The method according to claim 23 wherein following the preparation interval, T2 contrast is stored temporarily along the longitudinal axis, including removing the additive T1 recovery term to preserve the prepared T2 contrast by cycling the longitudinally stored T2 contrast between the ±z axes by applying an inversion pulse immediately following the tip-up pulse on subsequent excitation, and including removing the additive term upon subtraction of the acquired data.
- 26. The method according to claim 16 wherein τ180 is 6 ms or less.
- 27. The method according to claim 16 wherein a signal-to-noise ratio per pixel greater than 10 at the time of the longest T2 preparation interval is used to avoid noise bias in the R2Blood measurement.
- 28. The method according to claim 16 wherein when measuring R2Blood in larger blood vessels closer to the body surface, step c) of measuring the magnetic resonance signal includes using a 5 inch surface coil for receiving the MR signal.
- 29. The method according to claim 16 wherein when measuring R2Blood in smaller blood vessels centrally located in the body surface, step c) of measuring the magnetic resonance signal includes using an array of coils for receiving the MR signal.
- 30. The method according to claim 10 wherein a respiratory bellows is used and a signal processing unit of a magnetic resonance (MR) imager is used to monitor and record a respiratory phase at a time of each data acquisition.
- 31. The method according to claim 30 wherein following collection of a full data set, a histogram of the respiratory phases is constructed, and wherein overscanning and using a Diminishing Variance Algorithm are then applied to “freeze” the respiratory motion.
- 32. The method according to claim 30 including compensating for cardiac motion by gating using a plethysmograph placed on a finger of the patient for an ECG trigger, and wherein an R wave of the ECG signal is used for triggering the pulse sequence.
- 33. The method according to claim 30 including using a steady-state longitudinal magnetization at the time of each excitation and acquiring data following every other heart beat.
- 34. The method according to claim 10 wherein including collecting the R2Blood at a pressure independent region such as the brachiocephalic or jugular vein and the region of interest where the pressure is to be measured, and computing the differences between the respective R2Bloods and using the aforementioned calibration curve, pressure in a region of interest is mapped.
Priority Claims (1)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
| 2,418,229 |
Jan 2003 |
CA |
|
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED UNITED STATES PATENT APPLICATIONS
[0001] This patent application relates to U.S. Provisional patent application Serial No. 60/378,048 filed on May 16, 2002, entitled MICROBUBBLE CONSTRUCT FOR SENSITIVITY ENHANCED MR MANOMETRY, and Canadian patent application Serial No. 2,418,229 filed on Jan. 31, 2003, entitled MICROBUBBLE CONSTRUCT FOR SENSITIVITY ENHANCED MR MANOMETRY, both published in English, and both patent applications being incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60378048 |
May 2002 |
US |