DocumentCode
991669
Title
Magnetic resonance imaging can cause focal heating in a nonuniform phantom
Author
Davis, Peter L. ; Shang, Charles ; Talagala, Lalith ; Pasculle, A. William
Author_Institution
Med. Center, Pittsburgh Univ., PA, USA
Volume
40
Issue
12
fYear
1993
Firstpage
1324
Lastpage
1327
Abstract
To test if the radiofrequency fields of a magnetic resonance imager could cause focal heating, 2 cylindrical phantoms were made from a mixture of agar and saline. The first phantom was uniform; the second was nonuniform in that a narrow bridge of agar was produced. Both phantoms were exposed to high levels of radiofrequency power (140 W) at 63 MHz and the temperature rises were measured. In the uniform phantom, the temperature increased as the radius increased. In the bridge phantom, the narrow bridge heated 3 times greater than at the opposite uniform periphery, and over 5 times the average of the uniform phantom. This experiment demonstrates that the radiofrequency fields of magnetic resonance imagers can cause focal heating if the exposed object is nonuniform. Since nonuniformity is present in the human body, as the radiofrequency power of magnetic resonance imaging techniques increases, focal heating in patients is a concern.
Keywords
biological effects of fields; biomedical NMR; biothermics; health hazards; radiofrequency heating; 140 W; 63 MHz; agar/saline mixture; cylindrical phantom; diagnostic procedure safety; focal heating; health hazard; human body nonuniformity; magnetic resonance imaging; narrow agar bridge; nonuniform phantom; Bridges; Heating; Imaging phantoms; Magnetic field measurement; Magnetic resonance; Magnetic resonance imaging; Power measurement; Radio frequency; Temperature measurement; Testing; Heat; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Models, Structural; Radio Waves; Temperature; Time Factors;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/10.250588
Filename
250588
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