This project outlines technical bioengineering development for high resolution liver imaging at ultrahigh field in diagnosing fatty liver disease. Preliminary research in this field is extremely promising by using in-phase and opposed-phase images at 1.5 Tesla. And preliminary human liver images at ultrahigh field of 7 Tesla have been achieved at UCSF. This """"""""Pathway to Independence"""""""" award application includes a mentored career development plan for transition of the candidate, Dr. Yong Pang, into an independent investigator, as well an accompanying research plan describing the proposed technical developments for high resolution in-vivo imaging of human liver at ultrahigh field. The candidate, Dr. Yong Pang, is currently Postdoctoral Research Scholar at UCSF working on technical developments of RF coil array, parallel transmission and parallel imaging at 7 Tesla. His graduate work was focused on improving excitation accuracy and reducing power deposition using goal-oriented two-dimensional RF pulse, and compensating mutual coupling for parallel transmission. The mentoring and career development plan will supplement his engineering background with valuable exposure to human abdominal anatomy, biochemistry, clinical research design, clinical data analysis, and inter-disciplinary collaboration to facilitate the transition to an independent bioengineering investigator. His goals are to become a faculty member in bioengineering or radiology where he can research technical biomedical imaging developments with potential clinical applications. Ultrahigh field potentially provides high signal to noise ratio. However human liver imaging is subject to conducting effect, motion artifacts and RF field variation, especially with the increase of the field strength. Transferring human liver imaging techniques to ultrahigh field requires special methods, including RF coil, RF pulse and imaging sequence design. This project proposes high efficiency transceiver RF coil array and parallel imaging compressed sensing on time-optimal sparse k-space trajectory for high resolution multislice liver imaging within short time. Preclinical studies in healthy volunteers an volunteers with fatty liver disease will be used for investigation of the new imaging techniques. This will facilitate the translation of the methods from development to future clinical application

Public Health Relevance

MRI has become one of the most promising noninvasive methods in evaluating the liver under normal and diseased conditions, and has been used for diagnosing fatty liver diseases. The new in-vivo imaging methods at ultrahigh field proposed in this project will provide unprecedented high resolution to improve human liver imaging and potentially enable new clinical applications.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB)
Type
Career Transition Award (K99)
Project #
1K99EB015487-01A1
Application #
8510339
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZEB1-OSR-B (J2))
Program Officer
Erim, Zeynep
Project Start
2013-04-01
Project End
2015-03-31
Budget Start
2013-04-01
Budget End
2014-03-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$89,192
Indirect Cost
$6,607
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Radiation-Diagnostic/Oncology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
094878337
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94143
Pang, Yong; Wong, Ernest W H; Yu, Baiying et al. (2014) Design and numerical evaluation of a volume coil array for parallel MR imaging at ultrahigh fields. Quant Imaging Med Surg 4:50-6
Pang, Yong; Jiang, Xiaohua; Zhang, Xiaoliang (2014) Sparse parallel transmission on randomly perturbed spiral k-space trajectory. Quant Imaging Med Surg 4:106-11
Pang, Yong; Yu, Baiying; Zhang, Xiaoliang (2014) Enhancement of the low resolution image quality using randomly sampled data for multi-slice MR imaging. Quant Imaging Med Surg 4:136-44
Pang, Yong; Yu, Baiying; Vigneron, Daniel B et al. (2014) Quadrature transmit array design using single-feed circularly polarized patch antenna for parallel transmission in MR imaging. Quant Imaging Med Surg 4:11-8
Pang, Yong; Wu, Bing; Jiang, Xiaohua et al. (2014) Tilted microstrip phased arrays with improved electromagnetic decoupling for ultrahigh-field magnetic resonance imaging. Medicine (Baltimore) 93:e311
Li, Ye; Yu, Baiying; Pang, Yong et al. (2013) Planar quadrature RF transceiver design using common-mode differential-mode (CMDM) transmission line method for 7T MR imaging. PLoS One 8:e80428