4.5 Article

Magnetic resonance conditionality of abandoned leads from active implantable medical devices at 1.5 T

Journal

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE
Volume 87, Issue 1, Pages 394-408

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mrm.28967

Keywords

abandoned leads; active implantable medical devices (AIMDs); transfer function (TF); magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); RF-induced heating

Funding

  1. Division of Industrial Innovation and Partnerships [1922389]
  2. Directorate For Engineering
  3. Div Of Industrial Innovation & Partnersh [1922389] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study investigates the heating of abandoned AIMD leads with different proximal end treatments, finding that lead-tip heating is lower when terminated with metal compared to being insulated with plastic, which could result in up to 3.5 times higher temperature rise.
Purpose During MR scans, abandoned leads from active implantable medical devices (AIMDs) can experience excessive heating at the lead tip, depending on the type of termination applied to the proximal contacts (proximal end treatment). The influence of different proximal end treatments (ie, [1] freely exposed in the tissue, [2] terminated with metal in contact with the tissue, or [3] capped with plastic, and thereby fully insulated, on the RF-induced lead-tip heating) are studied. A technique to ensure that MR Conditional AIMD leads remain MR Conditional even when abandoned is recommended. Methods Abandoned leads from three MR Conditional AIMDs ([1] a sacral neuromodulation system, [2] a cardiac rhythm management pacemaker system, and [3] a deep brain stimulator system) were investigated in this study. The computational lead models (ie, the transfer functions) for different proximal end treatments were measured and used to assess the in vivo lead-tip heating for four virtual human models (FATS, Duke, Ella, and Billie) and compared with the lead-tip heating of the complete MR Conditional AIMD system. Result The average and maximum lead-tip heating for abandoned leads proximally capped with metal is always lower than that from the complete AIMD system. Abandoned leads proximally insulated could lead to an average in vivo temperature rise up to 3.5 times higher than that from the complete AIMD system. Conclusion For the three investigated AIMDs under 1.5T MR scanning, our results indicate that RF-induced lead-tip heating of abandoned leads strongly depends on the proximal lead termination. A metallic cap applied to the proximal termination of the tested leads could significantly reduce the RF-induced lead-tip heating.

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