The final deliverable of this project is a powerful microchip, or system-on-a-chip (SOC), that contains the functionality of a complete digital MR spectrometer and wireless transmitter. The three specific aims present an iterative, three stage strategy for chipset development. With the completion of each specific aim, the deliverables will be fully functional chipsets with decreasing footprint until we reach the dimensions of the final SOC. We begin with a 50x50x20mm prototype on a printed circuit board that will eventually be reduced to a miniature 2x2x1mm complete SOC blueprint. This microchip technology will be the centerpiece of a wireless, digital RF chain that is superior in performance to the traditional wired, analog RF chain, and is a paradigm shift for the entire field of MRI. Integration of this microchip into an RF coil will enable digital processing of the MR signal to be performed directly on the coil, followed by digital wireless signal transmission, thereby improving SNR and removing all mechanical connections between the RF coil and MR scanner. Specifically, we will develop the microchip technology for integration into a miniature RF coil-based """"""""wireless marker"""""""", whose position can be tracked inside the MR scanner bore. Motion tracking of the head is performed using three wireless markers that are easily placed on the forehead, which will provide pose information for real-time motion correction of brain MRI. This application fittingly highlights the strengths of the microchip approach (miniature, wireless device), as well as our significant in-house expertise in motion correction. Head motion is still a fundamental problem for brain MRI, which adds to healthcare costs while also reducing diagnostic confidence. A wireless marker based motion correction solution will significantly benefit healthcare by reducing prep/scan time, costs, and stress to patient that are caused by a dependence on anesthesia and repeat scans due to motion. The diagnostic quality of MRI will also be improved, particularly in patient populations who have difficulty keeping still (e.g. pediatrics, elderly). Wireless markers also possess several advantages over alternative techniques, including: (1) improved patient safety by eliminating electrically conducting wires that can cause tissue heating;(2) no additional load is placed on the existing MR receiver hardware since communication occurs within its own wireless network;(3) compatibility with a wide range of clinical scans, as only a short navigator pulse-sequence is needed for position measurement;(4) does not require any cross-calibration routines (e.g. optical camera tracking), since tracking and imaging are performed in the same MR coordinate system;and (5) importantly, a miniature, wireless-marker tracking-device will be easy to use, thereby facilitating their portability to the high-throughput clinic. Looking beyond motion correction (and the scope of this R21), the powerful chipsets are an enabling technology for wireless, digital communication between ALL RF coils and the MR scanner. The chipset digitizes the MR signal directly on the RF coil, digitally modulates, and wirelessly transmits the digital MR signal. SNR i therefore increased by avoiding resistive losses and coupling due to long coaxial cables. In the case of a multi-channel imaging RF coil, each channel would have a matching set of on-coil microchips that perform all MR spectrometer operations. By performing these operations directly on the RF coil, the MR scanner becomes channel independent, and RF channel upgrades a thing of the past. An array of microchips may be deployed in a massively multi-channel coil, thereby facilitating the trend in MRI towards parallel imaging. Finally, the elimination of cables and large oncoil electronics will result in lighter and easier to handle RF coils. Digital wireless links in MRI may also benefit from similar technology that is being rapidly advanced in the field of modern mobile telephony. In summary, the powerful chipsets developed here will not only influence motion correction, but also innovate a fully digital and fully wireless MR scanner in the future. In the current R21, we expect to produce a high-impact motion correction strategy that is, overall, the most comprehensive, robust, and patient friendly solution to date. The technology and preliminary results garnered will then be used for two future R01 proposals. The first R01 will be for clinical validation of an even more refined wireless marker. The second R01 will be to refine and validate a high-fidelity wireless spectrometer IC for imaging RF coils. Another future application would be MR-PET where a small footprint IC spectrometer would eliminate a lot of the current x-ray dense RF electronics, which interacts with 511keV photons and thus perturbs the PET imaging process.

Public Health Relevance

The deliverable of this project is a tiny microchip that contains the functionality of a complete digital MR spectrometer and wireless transmitter. This microchip is relevant to public health as: 1) the centerpiece of a miniature wireless marker package for real-time motion correction for brain MRI;2) an enabling technology for ALL RF coil communications with the MR scanner via a digital, wireless link. Motion is still an unsolved problem in MR, with high clinical and public health costs. Motion artifacts can often mask subtle lesions, obscure pathologies, or simply lower diagnostic confidence. Often, it is patients with the greatest need (e.g. pediatric, elderly, neurological/motor disorders) in which the usefulness of MRI is curtailed by motion. In the absence of an ideal motion correction strategy, clinics depend on sedation, repeat scans, patient callbacks, and the individual skill of a radiologist to read through artifacts. This leads to extra expenses on the health care system (due to increased prep time, scan time, and sedation costs), patient inconvenience and safety risks related to sedation, and in the worst-case patient harm due to incorrect diagnosis. We expect that the strengths of our microchip-based wireless marker approach, namely its small size and wireless operation, will result in the most comprehensive, robust, and easy to use motion correction solution to date. The powerful microchip will also be an enabling technology for a fully digital, wireless MR scanner for the future, which represents a significant upgrade over traditional analog, wired MR scanners. The result is increased image quality by avoiding analog signal degradation due to long wires, makes the MR scanner channel-independent, enables scalable MR scanner architectures, and facilitates the trend towards parallel imaging. By eliminating all cables and large on-coil electronics boards, RF coils will also be lighter and easier to handle.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
1R21EB017616-01
Application #
8597817
Study Section
Biomedical Imaging Technology Study Section (BMIT)
Program Officer
Liu, Guoying
Project Start
2013-09-01
Project End
2015-08-31
Budget Start
2013-09-01
Budget End
2014-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$196,250
Indirect Cost
$71,250
Name
Stanford University
Department
Radiation-Diagnostic/Oncology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
009214214
City
Stanford
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94305
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Zaitsev, Maxim; Maclaren, Julian; Herbst, Michael (2015) Motion artifacts in MRI: A complex problem with many partial solutions. J Magn Reson Imaging 42:887-901
Van, Anh T; Aksoy, Murat; Holdsworth, Samantha J et al. (2015) Slab profile encoding (PEN) for minimizing slab boundary artifact in three-dimensional diffusion-weighted multislab acquisition. Magn Reson Med 73:605-13
Kopeinigg, Daniel; Bammer, Roland (2014) Time-resolved angiography using inflow subtraction (TRAILS). Magn Reson Med 72:669-78