A Novel Magnetic Resonance Radio-Frequency Coil Array that Eliminates Inductive Coupling
A novel RF coil circuitry scheme to remove inductive coupling and to overcome the limitations of having to use overlapping geometries and low-impedance preamplifiers.
Full description
Parallel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques employ
RF coil arrays for faster data acquisition, and have been shown
to reduce the overall length of MRI procedures, improve signal-to-
noise ratio (SNR) and image quality, thus making MRI more
attractive and less costly. Elimination of inductive coupling is an
essential step in designing RF coil arrays for parallel MRI. If
mutual inductance remains among coils in the RF coil array, the
MR signal obtained from one coil may disturb the flux in another
coil, making it difficult to match the impedance of each individual
element to the input impedance its preamplifier. This non-optimal
matching can lead to degradation of MR signal thereby yielding
images with low quality. The most common strategy for inductive
decoupling involves the use of preamplifiers with very low input
impedance and decoupling networks with lumped elements.
However, the construction of preamplifiers with low input
impedance is not easy to accomplish, and these preamplifiers
impose technical restrictions on coil design, requiring the use of
overlapping loops to further minimize the amount of mutual
inductance between the coils.
The present invention describes a novel RF coil circuitry scheme
to remove inductive coupling and to overcome the limitations of
having to use overlapping geometries and low-impedance
preamplifiers. The coil array employs a transformer to match the
input impedance of the preamplifier. The signal that reaches the
preamplifier is coupled in an inductive fashion to the RF coil
decoupling network through the transformer's primary coil.
Because primary and secondary coils in the transformer are
isolated, the preamplifier circuit (and the MRI scanner
electronics) is electrically isolated from the MR pickup coil. This
arrangement provides a perfect electrical balance and isolation
between the array channels, thus making it unnecessary to use
traps and balluns in the circuit. At 7T, a 4-channel small animal
coil array implementing the novel circuitry provided images with
excellent SNR and demonstrated isolation of all individual RF coils
and immunity to standing waves and other parasitic signals.
Applications: (1) MR imaging of humans, including imaging of
brain; (2) MR imaging of animals, including non-human primates
and rodents; (3) Functional imaging of humans and animals
Advantages: (1) Allows for increased flexibility of coil design
including geometries that require array with overlapping receiver
coil loops; (2) Can provide high level of mutual inductance
decoupling within coils in the array; (3) Isolates the grounds from
coil to coil, and cancels all ground loops related to the coil array;
(4) Greatly increases the signal to noise ratio in MR imaging
Development Status: Early stage; Working model made and
tested, improved model for animals under testing
Patent information
Patent Status: U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/789,934 filed
30 Mar 2006 (HHS Reference No. E-099-2006/0-US-01)
Inventors: George C. Nascimento and Afonso C. Silva (NINDS)
Type of business relationship sought
Licensees sought: Available for non-exclusive or exclusive
licensing.