Meeting Banner
Abstract #3299

fMRI in Patients with Implanted Electrodes: Understanding and Mitigating Imaging Artifacts

Iskindir Weldemeskel1 and Pierre LeVan2
1Biomedical Engineering, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada, 2Radiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada

Synopsis

Keywords: fMRI Analysis, Epilepsy, Implanted Electrodes, intracranial EEG, fMRI, Susceptibility

Motivation: Model susceptibility-induced signal degradation in fMRI in patients with implanted electrodes and reduce imaging artifacts across electrodes.

Goal(s): Develop a model to understand and mitigate susceptibility effects due to implanted electrodes in fMRI.

Approach: Model electrode (platinum sphere) and brain activation contrast (cylinders representing blood vessels) at 3T. Calculate intravoxel dephasing and assess the impact of the electrode on signal amplitude and activation contrast. Investigate the impact of echo times on signal loss.

Results: Key findings reveal signal enhancement with increased distance from the electrode and reduced contrast loss with shorter echo times.

Impact: This research could redefine future functional diagnostics in patients with implanted electrodes such as epilepsy or Parkinson’s disease patients, leading to more precise surgical interventions and improved patient care. Mitigating susceptibility-induced image artifacts will impact neuroscience research and clinical applications.

How to access this content:

For one year after publication, abstracts and videos are only open to registrants of this annual meeting. Registrants should use their existing login information. Non-registrant access can be purchased via the ISMRM E-Library.

After one year, current ISMRM & ISMRT members get free access to both the abstracts and videos. Non-members and non-registrants must purchase access via the ISMRM E-Library.

After two years, the meeting proceedings (abstracts) are opened to the public and require no login information. Videos remain behind password for access by members, registrants and E-Library customers.

Click here for more information on becoming a member.

Keywords