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Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment

Thermal Magnetic Resonance (ThermalMR) leverages radio frequency (RF)-induced heating to examine the role of temperature in biological systems and disease. To advance RF heating with multi-channel RF antenna arrays and overcome the shortcomings of current RF signal sources, this work reports on a 32...

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Autores principales: Han, Haopeng, Eigentler, Thomas Wilhelm, Wang, Shuailin, Kretov, Egor, Winter, Lukas, Hoffmann, Werner, Grass, Eckhard, Niendorf, Thoralf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7408155/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32605322
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12071720
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author Han, Haopeng
Eigentler, Thomas Wilhelm
Wang, Shuailin
Kretov, Egor
Winter, Lukas
Hoffmann, Werner
Grass, Eckhard
Niendorf, Thoralf
author_facet Han, Haopeng
Eigentler, Thomas Wilhelm
Wang, Shuailin
Kretov, Egor
Winter, Lukas
Hoffmann, Werner
Grass, Eckhard
Niendorf, Thoralf
author_sort Han, Haopeng
collection PubMed
description Thermal Magnetic Resonance (ThermalMR) leverages radio frequency (RF)-induced heating to examine the role of temperature in biological systems and disease. To advance RF heating with multi-channel RF antenna arrays and overcome the shortcomings of current RF signal sources, this work reports on a 32-channel modular signal generator (SG(PLL)). The SG(PLL) was designed around phase-locked loop (PLL) chips and a field-programmable gate array chip. To examine the system properties, switching/settling times, accuracy of RF power level and phase shifting were characterized. Electric field manipulation was successfully demonstrated in deionized water. RF heating was conducted in a phantom setup using self-grounded bow-tie RF antennae driven by the SG(PLL). Commercial signal generators limited to a lower number of RF channels were used for comparison. RF heating was evaluated with numerical temperature simulations and experimentally validated with MR thermometry. Numerical temperature simulations and heating experiments controlled by the SG(PLL) revealed the same RF interference patterns. Upon RF heating similar temperature changes across the phantom were observed for the SG(PLL) and for the commercial devices. To conclude, this work presents the first 32-channel modular signal source for RF heating. The large number of coherent RF channels, wide frequency range and accurate phase shift provided by the SG(PLL) form a technological basis for ThermalMR controlled hyperthermia anti-cancer treatment.
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spelling pubmed-74081552020-08-25 Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment Han, Haopeng Eigentler, Thomas Wilhelm Wang, Shuailin Kretov, Egor Winter, Lukas Hoffmann, Werner Grass, Eckhard Niendorf, Thoralf Cancers (Basel) Article Thermal Magnetic Resonance (ThermalMR) leverages radio frequency (RF)-induced heating to examine the role of temperature in biological systems and disease. To advance RF heating with multi-channel RF antenna arrays and overcome the shortcomings of current RF signal sources, this work reports on a 32-channel modular signal generator (SG(PLL)). The SG(PLL) was designed around phase-locked loop (PLL) chips and a field-programmable gate array chip. To examine the system properties, switching/settling times, accuracy of RF power level and phase shifting were characterized. Electric field manipulation was successfully demonstrated in deionized water. RF heating was conducted in a phantom setup using self-grounded bow-tie RF antennae driven by the SG(PLL). Commercial signal generators limited to a lower number of RF channels were used for comparison. RF heating was evaluated with numerical temperature simulations and experimentally validated with MR thermometry. Numerical temperature simulations and heating experiments controlled by the SG(PLL) revealed the same RF interference patterns. Upon RF heating similar temperature changes across the phantom were observed for the SG(PLL) and for the commercial devices. To conclude, this work presents the first 32-channel modular signal source for RF heating. The large number of coherent RF channels, wide frequency range and accurate phase shift provided by the SG(PLL) form a technological basis for ThermalMR controlled hyperthermia anti-cancer treatment. MDPI 2020-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7408155/ /pubmed/32605322 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12071720 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Han, Haopeng
Eigentler, Thomas Wilhelm
Wang, Shuailin
Kretov, Egor
Winter, Lukas
Hoffmann, Werner
Grass, Eckhard
Niendorf, Thoralf
Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment
title Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment
title_full Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment
title_fullStr Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment
title_short Design, Implementation, Evaluation and Application of a 32-Channel Radio Frequency Signal Generator for Thermal Magnetic Resonance Based Anti-Cancer Treatment
title_sort design, implementation, evaluation and application of a 32-channel radio frequency signal generator for thermal magnetic resonance based anti-cancer treatment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7408155/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32605322
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12071720
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