Paper
10 April 2008 A new method for SAR measurement in MRI
Rocco Romano, Fausto Acernese, Pietro Luigi Indovina, Fabrizio Barone
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Abstract
During an MR procedure, the patient absorbs a portion of the transmitted RF energy, which may result in tissue heating and other adverse effects, such as alterations in visual, auditory and neural functions. The Specific Absorption Rate (SAR), in W/kg, is the RF power absorbed per unit mass of tissue and is one of the most important parameters related with thermal effects and acts as a guideline for MRI safety. Strict limits to the SAR levels are imposed by patient safety international regulations (CEI - EN 60601 - 2 - 33) and SAR measurements are required in order to verify its respect. The recommended methods for mean SAR measurement are quite problematic and often require a maintenance man intervention and long stop machine. For example, in the CEI recommended pulse energy method, the presence of a maintenance man is required in order to correctly connect the required instrumentation; furthermore, the procedure is complex and requires remarkable processing and calculus. Simpler are the calorimetric methods, also if in this case long acquisition times are required in order to have significant temperature variations and accurate heat capacity knowledge (CEI - EN 60601 - 2 - 33). The phase transition method is a new method to measure SAR in MRI which has the advantages to be very simple and to overcome all the typical calorimetric method problems. It does not require in gantry temperature measurements, any specific heat or heat capacity knowledge, but only mass and time measurement.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Rocco Romano, Fausto Acernese, Pietro Luigi Indovina, and Fabrizio Barone "A new method for SAR measurement in MRI", Proc. SPIE 6935, Health Monitoring of Structural and Biological Systems 2008, 693526 (10 April 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.772209
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KEYWORDS
Synthetic aperture radar

Tissues

Scanners

Magnetic resonance imaging

Temperature metrology

Time metrology

Fusion energy

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