4.4 Article

Simultaneous estimation of SAR, thermal diffusivity, and damping using periodic power modulation for MRgFUS quality assurance

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYPERTHERMIA
Volume 40, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02656736.2023.2283388

Keywords

Specific absorbtion rate; focused ultrasound; thermometry; parameter estimation

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This study proposes a new frequency-domain estimation method for quality assurance in thermal therapy, which can provide unbiased estimates of specific absorption rate (SAR) and thermal diffusivity. By periodically modulating the power of focused ultrasound and recording the response with MRI thermometry, spatial Fourier coefficients are used to estimate the thermal response and parameters. The experimental results show that this method has a high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and reproducible estimates, with insensitivity to B 0 drift and non-steady-state initial temperature distributions.
Purpose: A crucial aspect of quality assurance in thermal therapy is periodic demonstration of the heating performance of the device. Existing methods estimate the specific absorption rate (SAR) from the temperature rise after a short power pulse, which yields a biased estimate as thermal diffusion broadens the apparent SAR pattern. To obtain an unbiased estimate, we propose a robust frequency-domain method that simultaneously identifies the SAR as well as the thermal dynamics.Methods: We propose a method consisting of periodic modulation of the FUS power while recording the response with MR thermometry (MRT). This approach enables unbiased measurements of spatial Fourier coefficients that encode the thermal response. These coefficients are substituted in a generic thermal model to simultaneously estimate the SAR, diffusivity, and damping. The method was tested using a cylindrical phantom and a 3 T clinical MR-HIFU system. Three scenarios with varying modulation strategies are chosen to challenge the method. The results are compared to the well-known power pulse technique.Results: The thermal diffusivity is estimated at 0.151 mm2s-1 with a standard deviation of 0.01 mm2s-1 between six experiments. The SAR estimates are consistent between all experiments and show an excellent signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) compared to the well established power pulse method. The frequency-domain method proved to be insensitive to B 0-drift and non steady-state initial temperature distributions.Conclusion: The proposed frequency-domain estimation method shows a high SNR and provided reproducible estimates of the SAR and the corresponding thermal diffusivity. The findings suggest that frequency-domain tools can be highly effective at estimating the SAR from (biased) MRT data acquired during periodic power modulation.

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