Magnetic resonance thermometry for hyperthermia in the oropharynx region

Theresa V. Feddersen (Corresponding author), Juan A. Hernandez-Tamames, Margarethus M. Paulides, Michiel Kroesen, Gerard C. van Rhoon, Dirk H.J. Poot

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Magnetic resonance thermometry (MRT) can measure in-vivo 3D-temperature changes in real-time and noninvasively. However, for the oropharynx region and the entire head and neck, motion potentially introduces large artifacts. Considering long treatment times of 60–90 min, this study aims to evaluate whether MRT around the oropharynx is clinically feasible for hyperthermia treatments and quantify the effects of breathing and swallowing on MRT performance. A 3D-ME-FGRE sequence was used in a phantom cooling down and around the oropharynx of five volunteers over ∼75 min. The imaging protocol consisted of imaging with acceleration (ARC = 2), number of image averages (NEX = 1,2 and 3). For volunteers, the acquisitions included a breath-hold scan and scans with deliberate swallowing. MRT performance was quantified in neck muscle, spinal cord and masseter muscle, using mean average error (MAE), mean error (ME) and spatial standard deviation (SD). In phantom, an increase in NEX leads to a significant decrease in SD, but MAE and ME were unchanged. No significant difference was found in volunteers between the different scans. There was a significant difference between the regions evaluated: neck muscle had the best MAE (=1.96 °C) and SD (=0.82 °C), followed by spinal cord (MAE = 3.17 °C, SD = 0.92 °C) and masseter muscle (MAE = 4.53 °C, SD = 1.16 °C). Concerning the ME, spinal cord did best, then neck muscle and masseter muscle, with values of −0.64 °C, 1.15 °C and −3.05 °C respectively. Breathing, swallowing, and different ways of imaging (acceleration and NEX) do not significantly influence the MRT performance in the oropharynx region. The ROI selected however, leads to significant differences.

Originele taal-2Engels
Artikelnummer2352545
Aantal pagina's11
TijdschriftInternational Journal of Hyperthermia
Volume41
Nummer van het tijdschrift1
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - 2024

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Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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