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MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety

BACKGROUND: The field of interventional cardiovascular MRI is hampered by the unavailability of active guidewires that are both safe and conspicuous. Heating of conductive guidewires is difficult to predict in vivo and disruptive to measure using external probes. We describe a clinical-grade 0.035”...

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Autores principales: Sonmez, Merdim, Saikus, Christina E, Bell, Jamie A, Franson, Dominique N, Halabi, Majdi, Faranesh, Anthony Z, Ozturk, Cengizhan, Lederman, Robert J, Kocaturk, Ozgur
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3419092/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22720758
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-14-38
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author Sonmez, Merdim
Saikus, Christina E
Bell, Jamie A
Franson, Dominique N
Halabi, Majdi
Faranesh, Anthony Z
Ozturk, Cengizhan
Lederman, Robert J
Kocaturk, Ozgur
author_facet Sonmez, Merdim
Saikus, Christina E
Bell, Jamie A
Franson, Dominique N
Halabi, Majdi
Faranesh, Anthony Z
Ozturk, Cengizhan
Lederman, Robert J
Kocaturk, Ozgur
author_sort Sonmez, Merdim
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The field of interventional cardiovascular MRI is hampered by the unavailability of active guidewires that are both safe and conspicuous. Heating of conductive guidewires is difficult to predict in vivo and disruptive to measure using external probes. We describe a clinical-grade 0.035” (0.89 mm) guidewire for MRI right and left heart catheterization at 1.5 T that has an internal probe to monitor temperature in real-time, and that has both tip and shaft visibility as well as suitable flexibility. METHODS: The design has an internal fiberoptic temperature probe, as well as a distal solenoid to enhance tip visibility on a loopless antenna. We tested different tip-solenoid configurations to balance heating and signal profiles. We tested mechanical performance in vitro and in vivo in comparison with a popular clinical nitinol guidewire. RESULTS: The solenoid displaced the point of maximal heating (“hot spot”) from the tip to a more proximal location where it can be measured without impairing guidewire flexion. Probe pullback allowed creation of lengthwise guidewire temperature maps that allowed rapid evaluation of design prototypes. Distal-only solenoid attachment offered the best compromise between tip visibility and heating among design candidates. When fixed at the hot spot, the internal probe consistently reflected the maximum temperature compared external probes. Real-time temperature monitoring was performed during porcine left heart catheterization. Heating was negligible using normal operating parameters (flip angle, 45°; SAR, 1.01 W/kg); the temperature increased by 4.2°C only during high RF power mode (flip angle, 90°; SAR, 3.96 W/kg) and only when the guidewire was isolated from blood cooling effects by an introducer sheath. The tip flexibility and in vivo performance of the final guidewire design were similar to a popular commercial guidewire. CONCLUSIONS: We integrated a fiberoptic temperature probe inside a 0.035” MRI guidewire. Real-time monitoring helps detect deleterious heating during use, without impairing mechanical guidewire operation, and without impairing MRI visibility. We therefore need not rely on prediction to ensure safe clinical operation. Future implementations may modulate specific absorption rate (SAR) based on temperature feedback.
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spelling pubmed-34190922012-08-15 MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety Sonmez, Merdim Saikus, Christina E Bell, Jamie A Franson, Dominique N Halabi, Majdi Faranesh, Anthony Z Ozturk, Cengizhan Lederman, Robert J Kocaturk, Ozgur J Cardiovasc Magn Reson Research BACKGROUND: The field of interventional cardiovascular MRI is hampered by the unavailability of active guidewires that are both safe and conspicuous. Heating of conductive guidewires is difficult to predict in vivo and disruptive to measure using external probes. We describe a clinical-grade 0.035” (0.89 mm) guidewire for MRI right and left heart catheterization at 1.5 T that has an internal probe to monitor temperature in real-time, and that has both tip and shaft visibility as well as suitable flexibility. METHODS: The design has an internal fiberoptic temperature probe, as well as a distal solenoid to enhance tip visibility on a loopless antenna. We tested different tip-solenoid configurations to balance heating and signal profiles. We tested mechanical performance in vitro and in vivo in comparison with a popular clinical nitinol guidewire. RESULTS: The solenoid displaced the point of maximal heating (“hot spot”) from the tip to a more proximal location where it can be measured without impairing guidewire flexion. Probe pullback allowed creation of lengthwise guidewire temperature maps that allowed rapid evaluation of design prototypes. Distal-only solenoid attachment offered the best compromise between tip visibility and heating among design candidates. When fixed at the hot spot, the internal probe consistently reflected the maximum temperature compared external probes. Real-time temperature monitoring was performed during porcine left heart catheterization. Heating was negligible using normal operating parameters (flip angle, 45°; SAR, 1.01 W/kg); the temperature increased by 4.2°C only during high RF power mode (flip angle, 90°; SAR, 3.96 W/kg) and only when the guidewire was isolated from blood cooling effects by an introducer sheath. The tip flexibility and in vivo performance of the final guidewire design were similar to a popular commercial guidewire. CONCLUSIONS: We integrated a fiberoptic temperature probe inside a 0.035” MRI guidewire. Real-time monitoring helps detect deleterious heating during use, without impairing mechanical guidewire operation, and without impairing MRI visibility. We therefore need not rely on prediction to ensure safe clinical operation. Future implementations may modulate specific absorption rate (SAR) based on temperature feedback. BioMed Central 2012-06-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3419092/ /pubmed/22720758 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-14-38 Text en Copyright ©2012 Sonmez et al.; licensee BioMed Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Sonmez, Merdim
Saikus, Christina E
Bell, Jamie A
Franson, Dominique N
Halabi, Majdi
Faranesh, Anthony Z
Ozturk, Cengizhan
Lederman, Robert J
Kocaturk, Ozgur
MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety
title MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety
title_full MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety
title_fullStr MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety
title_full_unstemmed MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety
title_short MRI active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety
title_sort mri active guidewire with an embedded temperature probe and providing a distinct tip signal to enhance clinical safety
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3419092/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22720758
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-14-38
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