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Description
A direct Magnetic Resonance (MR)-based neural activity mapping technique with high spatial and temporal resolution may accelerate studies of brain functional organization.

The most widely used technique for brain functional imaging is functional Magnetic Resonance Image (fMRI). The spatial resolution of fMRI is high. However, fMRI signals are highly influenced

A direct Magnetic Resonance (MR)-based neural activity mapping technique with high spatial and temporal resolution may accelerate studies of brain functional organization.

The most widely used technique for brain functional imaging is functional Magnetic Resonance Image (fMRI). The spatial resolution of fMRI is high. However, fMRI signals are highly influenced by the vasculature in each voxel and can be affected by capillary orientation and vessel size. Functional MRI analysis may, therefore, produce misleading results when voxels are nearby large vessels. Another problem in fMRI is that hemodynamic responses are slower than the neuronal activity. Therefore, temporal resolution is limited in fMRI. Furthermore, the correlation between neural activity and the hemodynamic response is not fully understood. fMRI can only be considered an indirect method of functional brain imaging.

Another MR-based method of functional brain mapping is neuronal current magnetic resonance imaging (ncMRI), which has been studied over several years. However, the amplitude of these neuronal current signals is an order of magnitude smaller than the physiological noise. Works on ncMRI include simulation, phantom experiments, and studies in tissue including isolated ganglia, optic nerves, and human brains. However, ncMRI development has been hampered due to the extremely small signal amplitude, as well as the presence of confounding signals from hemodynamic changes and other physiological noise.

Magnetic Resonance Electrical Impedance Tomography (MREIT) methods could have the potential for the detection of neuronal activity. In this technique, small external currents are applied to a body during MR scans. This current flow produces a magnetic field as well as an electric field. The altered magnetic flux density along the main magnetic field direction caused by this current flow can be obtained from phase images. When there is neural activity, the conductivity of the neural cell membrane changes and the current paths around the neurons change consequently. Neural spiking activity during external current injection, therefore, causes differential phase accumulation in MR data. Statistical analysis methods can be used to identify neuronal-current-induced magnetic field changes.
ContributorsFu, Fanrui (Author) / Sadleir, Rosalind (Thesis advisor) / Kodibagkar, Vikram (Committee member) / Kleim, Jeffrey (Committee member) / Muthuswamy, Jitendran (Committee member) / Helms Tillery, Stephen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of changes in metabolic activity in tumors and metabolic abnormalities can provide a window to understanding the complex behavior of malignant tumors. Both diagnostics and treatment options can be improved through the further comprehension of the processes that contribute to tumor malignancy and growth. By detecting

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of changes in metabolic activity in tumors and metabolic abnormalities can provide a window to understanding the complex behavior of malignant tumors. Both diagnostics and treatment options can be improved through the further comprehension of the processes that contribute to tumor malignancy and growth. By detecting and disturbing this activity through personalized treatments, it is the hope to provide better diagnostics and care to patients. Experimenting with multicellular tumor spheroids (MCTS) allows for a rapid, inexpensive and convenient solution to studying multiple in vitro tumors. High quality magnetic resonance images of small samples, such as spheroid, however, are difficult to achieve with current radio frequency coils. In addition, in order for the information provided by these scans to accurately represent the interactions and metabolic activity in vivo, there is a need for a perfused vascular network. A perfused vascular network has the potential to improve metabolic realism and particle transport within a tumor spheroid. By creating a more life-like cancer model and allowing the progressive imaging of metabolic functions of such small samples, a better, more efficient mode of studying metabolic activity in cancer can be created and research efforts can expand. The progress described in this paper attempts to address both of these current shortcomings of metabolic cancer research and offers potential solutions, while acknowledging the potential of future work to improve cancer research with MCTS.
ContributorsTobey, John Paul (Author) / Kodibagkar, Vikram (Thesis director) / Sadleir, Rosalind (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
In 1946 Felix Bloch first demonstrated the phenomenon of nuclear magnetic resonance using continuous-wave signal generation and acquisition. Shortly after in 1966, Richard R. Ernst demonstrated the breakthrough that nuclear magnetic resonance needed to develop into magnetic resonance imaging: the application of Fourier transforms for sensitive pulsed imaging. Upon this

In 1946 Felix Bloch first demonstrated the phenomenon of nuclear magnetic resonance using continuous-wave signal generation and acquisition. Shortly after in 1966, Richard R. Ernst demonstrated the breakthrough that nuclear magnetic resonance needed to develop into magnetic resonance imaging: the application of Fourier transforms for sensitive pulsed imaging. Upon this discovery, the world of research began to develop high power radio amplifiers and fast radio switches for pulsed experimentation. Consequently, continuous-wave imaging placed on the backburner.Although high power pulses are dominant in clinical imaging, there are unique advantages to low power, continuous-wave pulse sequences that transmit and receive signals simultaneously. Primarily, tissues or materials with short T2 time constants can be imaged and the peak radio power required is drastically reduced. The fundamental problem with this lies in its nature; the transmitter leaks a strong leakage signal into the receiver, thus saturating the receiver and the intended nuclear magnetic resonance signal is lost noise. Demonstrated in this dissertation is a multichannel standalone simultaneous transmit and receive (STAR) system with remote user-control that enables continuous- wave full-duplex imaging. STAR calibrates cancellation signals through vector modulators that match the leakage signal of each receiver in amplitude but opposite in phase, therefore destructively interfering the leakage signals. STAR does not require specific imaging coils or console inputs for calibration. It was designed to be general- purpose, therefore integrating into any imaging system. To begin, the user uses an Android tablet to tune STAR to match the Larmor frequency in the bore. Then, the user tells STAR to begin calibration. After self-calibrating, the user may fine-tune the calibration state of the system before enabling a low-power mode for system electronics and imaging may commence. STAR was demonstrated to isolate two receiver coils upwards of 70 dB from the transmit coil and is readily upgradable to enable the use of four receive coils. Some primary concerns of STAR are the removal of transceivers for multichannel operation, digital circuit noise, external noise, calibration speed, upgradability, and the isolation introduced; all of which are addressed in the proceeding thesis.
ContributorsColwell, Zachary Allen (Author) / Sohn, Sung-Min (Thesis advisor) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Thesis advisor) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Sadleir, Rosalind (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most powerful instrument for imaging anatomical structures. One of the most essential components of the MRI scanner is a radiofrequency (RF) coil. It induces resonant phenomena and receives the resonated RF signal from the body. Then, the signal is computed and reconstructed for MR

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most powerful instrument for imaging anatomical structures. One of the most essential components of the MRI scanner is a radiofrequency (RF) coil. It induces resonant phenomena and receives the resonated RF signal from the body. Then, the signal is computed and reconstructed for MR images. Therefore, improving image quality by increasing the receiver's (Rx) efficiency is always remarkable. This research introduces a flexible and stretchable receive RF coil embedded in a dielectric-loaded material. Recent studies show that the adaptable coil can improve imaging quality by flexing and stretching to fit well with the sample's surface, reducing the spatial distance between the load and the coil. High permittivity dielectric material positioned between the coil and phantom was known to increase the RF field distribution's efficiency significantly. Recent studies integrating the high dielectric material with the coil show a significant improvement in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which can improve the overall efficiency of the coil. Previous research also introduced new elastic dielectric material, which shows improvement in uniformity when incorporated with an RF coil. Combining the adaptable RF coil with the elastic dielectric material has the potential to enhance the coil's performance further. The flexible dielectric material's limitations and unknown interaction with the coil pose a challenge. Thus, each component was integrated into a simple loop coil step-by-step, which allowed for experimentation and evaluation of the performance of each part. The mechanical performance was tested manually. The introduced coil is highly flexible and can stretch up to 20% of its original length in one direction. The electrical performance was evaluated in simulations and experiments on a 9.4T MRI scanner compared to conventional RF coils.
ContributorsHerabut, Chavalchart (Author) / Sohn, SungMin (Thesis advisor) / Sadleir, Rosalind (Committee member) / Beeman, Scott (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023