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Abstract #3743

On the combination of simulations from various human models to account for variabilities while limiting SAR10g overestimation for UHF pTx MRI

Aurelien Destruel1,2, Jin Jin3,4, Ewald Weber3, Feng Liu3, Maxime Guye1,2, and Virginie Callot1,2
1Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, CRMBM, Marseille, France, 2APHM, Hôpital Universitaire Timone, CEMEREM, Marseille, France, 3School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia, 4Siemens Healthcare Pty Ltd, Brisbane, Australia

Synopsis

Keywords: Safety, Safety, Parallel transmit (pTx); Spinal cord; Specific absorption rate;

Motivation: Reports highlight variability in 10g-averaged specific absorption rate (SAR10g) when varying subjects and radiofrequency coil position, necessitating safety factors to prevent underestimation, leading to overconservative SAR constraints.

Goal(s): To provide a method for selecting appropriate body models to balance RF safety and sequence performance, while investigating SAR10g variability in 7T spinal cord pTx MRI.

Approach: The impact of tissue properties, anatomy, body-mass index, and coil positioning on SAR10g was evaluated according to multiple metrics.

Results: The mean absolute percentage error can complement the safety factor to decrease SAR10g overestimation and guide the choice of human models used for SAR-monitoring.

Impact: Simulations of local-SAR in generic human models are widely used to ensure RF safety at 7T. We show that optimizing the choice of models used for SAR-monitoring may lead to less conservative SAR-constraints, which may improve sequence and pTx performance.

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