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Abstract #1036

Combining transceiver loops with a conventional receive array increases central SNR in brain imaging at 7T

Belinda Ding1, Jiaruo Yan2,3, Rosemary Woodward4, Sarah Allwood-Spiers4, Sydney Williams2, Graeme A Keith2, Paul McElhinney 2, Natasha Fullerton4, David Porter2, and Shajan Gunamony2,3
1Siemens Healthcare Limited, Camberley, United Kingdom, 2Imaging Centre of Excellence, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom, 3MR CoilTech Limited, Glasgow, United Kingdom, 4NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Glasgow, United Kingdom

Synopsis

Keywords: RF Arrays & Systems, Brain

Motivation: Previous studies have reported central SNR improvements at 7T with dipole transceivers, but not with loops-based arrays.

Goal(s): Assess the performance of an 8TxRx56Rx loop-based transceiver array against three conventional 8Tx32/64Rx arrays.

Approach: SNR and g-factor maps were acquired from phantom and healthy volunteers for four head coils (1Tx32Rx, 8Tx32Rx, 8Tx64Rx, 8TxRx56Rx) at 7T

Results: The modified 8TxRx56Rx coil showed a 12.6% increase in central SNR for in vivo scans. The peripheral SNR and g-factor maps remain comparable to their 8Tx64Rx counterpart, and both 64Rx coils performed significantly better than 32Rx coils at high acceleration factors.

Impact: A 56-channel receive 8-channel loop-based transceiver array can improve central image SNR at 7T without compromising g-factor compared to a conventional 64-channel receive 8-channel transmit coil.

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