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Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models

PURPOSE: Cardiac stimulation (CS) limits to gradient coil switching speed are difficult to measure in humans; instead, current regulatory guidelines (IEC 60601–2-33) are based on animal experiments and electric field–to-dB/dt conversion factors computed for a simple, homogeneous body model. We propo...

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Autores principales: Klein, Valerie, Davids, Mathias, Schad, Lothar R., Wald, Lawrence L., Guérin, Bastien
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7722025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32812280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28472
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author Klein, Valerie
Davids, Mathias
Schad, Lothar R.
Wald, Lawrence L.
Guérin, Bastien
author_facet Klein, Valerie
Davids, Mathias
Schad, Lothar R.
Wald, Lawrence L.
Guérin, Bastien
author_sort Klein, Valerie
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Cardiac stimulation (CS) limits to gradient coil switching speed are difficult to measure in humans; instead, current regulatory guidelines (IEC 60601–2-33) are based on animal experiments and electric field–to-dB/dt conversion factors computed for a simple, homogeneous body model. We propose improvement to this methodology by using more detailed CS modeling based on realistic body models and electrophysiological models of excitable cardiac fibers. METHODS: We compute electric fields induced by a solenoid, coplanar loops, and a commercial gradient coil in two human body models and a canine model. The canine simulations mimic previously published experiments. We generate realistic fiber topologies for the cardiac Purkinje and ventricular muscle fiber networks using rule-based algorithms, and evaluate CS thresholds using validated electrodynamic models of these fibers. RESULTS: We were able to reproduce the average measured canine CS thresholds within 5%. In all simulations, the Purkinje fibers were stimulated before the ventricular fibers, and therefore set the effective CS threshold. For the investigated gradient coil, simulated CS thresholds for the x-, y-, and z-axis were at least one order of magnitude greater than the International Electrotechnical Commission limit. CONCLUSION: We demonstrate an approach to simulate gradient-induced CS using a combination of electromagnetic and electrophysiological modeling. Pending additional validation, these simulations could guide the assessment of CS limits to MRI gradient coil switching speed. Such an approach may lead to less conservative, but still safe, operation limits, enabling the use of the maximum gradient amplitude versus slew rate parameter space of recent, powerful gradient systems.
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spelling pubmed-77220252021-02-01 Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models Klein, Valerie Davids, Mathias Schad, Lothar R. Wald, Lawrence L. Guérin, Bastien Magn Reson Med Article PURPOSE: Cardiac stimulation (CS) limits to gradient coil switching speed are difficult to measure in humans; instead, current regulatory guidelines (IEC 60601–2-33) are based on animal experiments and electric field–to-dB/dt conversion factors computed for a simple, homogeneous body model. We propose improvement to this methodology by using more detailed CS modeling based on realistic body models and electrophysiological models of excitable cardiac fibers. METHODS: We compute electric fields induced by a solenoid, coplanar loops, and a commercial gradient coil in two human body models and a canine model. The canine simulations mimic previously published experiments. We generate realistic fiber topologies for the cardiac Purkinje and ventricular muscle fiber networks using rule-based algorithms, and evaluate CS thresholds using validated electrodynamic models of these fibers. RESULTS: We were able to reproduce the average measured canine CS thresholds within 5%. In all simulations, the Purkinje fibers were stimulated before the ventricular fibers, and therefore set the effective CS threshold. For the investigated gradient coil, simulated CS thresholds for the x-, y-, and z-axis were at least one order of magnitude greater than the International Electrotechnical Commission limit. CONCLUSION: We demonstrate an approach to simulate gradient-induced CS using a combination of electromagnetic and electrophysiological modeling. Pending additional validation, these simulations could guide the assessment of CS limits to MRI gradient coil switching speed. Such an approach may lead to less conservative, but still safe, operation limits, enabling the use of the maximum gradient amplitude versus slew rate parameter space of recent, powerful gradient systems. 2020-08-19 2021-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7722025/ /pubmed/32812280 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28472 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Klein, Valerie
Davids, Mathias
Schad, Lothar R.
Wald, Lawrence L.
Guérin, Bastien
Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models
title Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models
title_full Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models
title_fullStr Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models
title_full_unstemmed Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models
title_short Investigating cardiac stimulation limits of MRI gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models
title_sort investigating cardiac stimulation limits of mri gradient coils using electromagnetic and electrophysiological simulations in human and canine body models
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7722025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32812280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28472
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