MGH Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging 2016 | Page 7

in previously unreachable places,” said Mathieu Sarracanie, a research fellow in the Low-Field Imaging Laboratory in the Martinos Center and lead author of the newly published results. This creates a number of new opportunities for MRI. Not least: Without the need for massive, cryogencooled superconducting magnets, the scanners can be sited and operated in a range of unconventional environments. For example, ultraThe technology described in the low-field scanners operating with paper operates at a magnetic field this new technology could complestrength of 6.5 millitesla—more ment traditional MRI by relieving than 450 times lower than with hospital congestion and reducing clinical MRI scanners. The authors triage delays in the neuro-intensive of the study, including Sarracanie, care unit. Cristen LaPierre, Najat Salameh, David Waddington, Thomas Witzel Also, mobile standalone scanners and Matthew Rosen, achieved high- could be implemented in resourceperformance MRI at this ultra-low poor environments and in situafield strength through innovative tions where MRI systems are not engineering, acquisition strategies, traditionally available—for examand signal processing. In the paper, ple, during military conflicts, natuthey report 3D MRI of the living ral disasters or sports events. human brain with heretofore unattainable speed and resolution in the “This novel non-cryogenic ultra-low ultra-low-field MRI regime. field MRI technology will be smaller, lighter, less expensive, more robust and more transportable than conventional MRI systems,” said Rosen, Director of the Low-Field Imaging Laboratory, an Assistant Professor of Radiology at Harvard Medical School and the senior author of the work, “allowing for operation in, for example, battlefield hospitals—near to where injuries are most likely to occur—and enabling assessment of brain injury within the first hours of the primary injury.” Importantly, the ultra-low-field technology is also considerably less expensive than traditional MRI. Conventional scanners can cost upwards of $1.5 million for the high-field (1.5-Tesla) devices most commonly used today. The scanner described in the Nature Scientific Reports paper, in contrast, could cost less than $50,000. A Scanner So Small It Could Fit In The Back Of An Ambulance In a 2015 paper, Clarissa Zimmer- Jason Stockmann is the lead author Matt Rosen and senior author Larry man Cooley and colleagues reported of the 2016 paper. Other contribu- Wald. the construction and validation of a tors include Cooley, Bastien Guerin, prototype of another portable MR system. This scanner, which weighs in at less than 100 kg, works by replacing conventional gradient encoding with a rotating, lightweight, cryogen-free, low-field magnet (called a “Halbach” magnet). In a Journal of Magnetic Resonance paper published in June 2016, the researchers described a study in which they extended the capabilities of the MR encoding method Transmit Array Spatial Encoding (TRASE) to enable its use in portable imaging systems with inhomogeneous B0 fields—like the one they developed. This work moves the prototype scanner ever closer to realization. Clarissa Zimmerman Cooley, Jason Stockmann and Larry Wald