Electricity: measuring and testing – Particle precession resonance – Spectrometer components
Reexamination Certificate
2002-09-30
2004-01-13
Arana, Louis (Department: 2859)
Electricity: measuring and testing
Particle precession resonance
Spectrometer components
C324S318000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06677755
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to nuclear magnetic resonance (“NMR”) imaging and, more particularly, to methods and apparatus for imaging the peripheral vasculature.
Initially, NMR imaging systems utilized receiver coils which surrounded the entire sample (for example a human patient) that was to be imaged. These remote coils had the advantage that the sensitivity was, to a first approximation, substantially constant over the entire region being imaged. While this uniformity in sensitivity is not strictly characteristic of such remote coils, the sensitivity is substantially constant to a sufficient degree that most reconstruction techniques assume a constant coil sensitivity. Because of their large size the remote coils suffer from a relative insensitivity to individual spins.
For certain applications, a surface coil is preferable to a remote coil. Surface coils can be made much smaller in geometry than remote coils and for medical diagnostic use can be applied near, on, or inside the body of a patient. This is especially important where attention is being directed to imaging a small region within the patient, rather than an entire anatomical cross section. The use of a surface coil also reduces the noise contribution from electrical losses in the body, with respect to a corresponding remote coil, while maximizing the desired signal. NMR imaging systems thus typically use a small surface coil for localized high-resolution imaging.
A disadvantage of the surface coil, however, is its limited field of view. A single surface coil can only effectively image that region of the sample having lateral dimensions comparable to the surface coil diameter. Therefore, the surface coil necessarily restricts the field of view and inevitably leads to a tradeoff between resolution and field of view. The size of the surface coil is constrained by the intrinsic signal to noise ratio of the coil. Generally, larger coils induce greater patient sample losses and therefore have a larger noise component, while smaller coils have lower noise but in turn restrict the field of view to a smaller region.
One technique for extending the field-of-view limitation of a single surface coil is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,825,162 to Roemer et al. Roemer et al. describes a set of surface coils arrayed with overlapping fields of view. Each of the surface coils is positioned so as to have substantially no interaction with all adjacent surface coils. A different NMR response signal is received at each different one of the surface coils from an associated portion of the sample enclosed within an imaging volume defined by the array. Each different NMR response signal is used to construct a different one of a like plurality of NMR images of the sample, with the plurality of different images then being combined to produce a single composite NMR image. Roemer et al. describes a four-coil array for imaging the human spine.
While an increased number of surface coils may be used to increase the field of view, NMR system scanners typically have a limited number of preamplifier inputs. The number of preamplifier inputs is therefore a design limitation in the design of phased array surface coils. A disadvantage of known phased array surface coils, therefore, is that the surface coil array may include only as many coils as can be directly connected to the preamplifiers of the system scanner.
One technique for constructing images of areas of greater size from the limited field of view of known surface coil combinations is to move the surface coils after successive scans. This technique, however, requires excessive scan room intervention. That is, after each scan, a technician enters the scan room to physically re-position the coils. This may increase examination time and increase the likelihood of a patient rejecting the procedure.
It would be desirable to obtain increased field of view without scan room intervention.
It would also be desirable to have an improved phased array surface coil for providing a large field of view. It is further desirable to utilize a greater number of surface coils in the array.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In one aspect of the present invention, a circuit is used to selectively enable and disable n-coils. The circuit includes n-drivers powered by a current source. Each n-driver includes a pair of FETs disposed such that a gate of one FET is connected to a gate of the other FET to form a common gate node thereat. The n-drivers are disposed in a totem-pole configuration. The one FET of a first of the n-drivers has (A) a drain linked to a ground and to an end of a first of the n-coils and (B) a source linked to a drain of the one FET of a second of the n-drivers and to an end of a second of the n-coils. The other FET of the first of the n-drivers has (A) a source linked to an opposite end of the first of the n-coils and (B) a drain linked to the end of the second of the n-coils and to the source of the one FET of the first of the n-drivers. The one FET of the second of the n-drivers also has a source linked to a drain of the one FET of a next of the n-drivers and to an end of a next of the n-coils. The other FET of the second of the n-drivers also has (A) a source linked to an opposite end of the second of the n-coils and (B) a drain linked to the end of the next of the n-coils and to the source of the one FET of the second of the n-drivers. This continues until the one FET and the other FET of an nth of the n-drivers are likewise disposed in the totem-pole configuration of the n-drivers, with a source and a drain of the one FET and the other FET, respectively, of the nth of the n-drivers being connected to the current source. Each of the n-drivers is used to operate a corresponding one of the n-coils by being responsive at its common gate node (i) a coil disable signal by activating the one FET thereof and deactivating the other FET thereof thereby not only drawing current away from and thus disabling the corresponding coil but also allowing the current to flow through the one FET and thus be available as a source of current to a successive one of the n-drivers and (ii) a coil enable signal by deactivating the one FET thereof and activating the other FET thereof thereby allowing the current not only to flow serially through the corresponding coil and the other FET thus enabling the corresponding coil but also to be available as a source of current to the succesive one of the n-drivers.
REFERENCES:
patent: 4718424 (1988-01-01), Nishimura
patent: 4721913 (1988-01-01), Hyde et al.
patent: 4825162 (1989-04-01), Roemer et al.
patent: 4975644 (1990-12-01), Fox
patent: 5034694 (1991-07-01), Sattin et al.
patent: 5132621 (1992-07-01), Kang et al.
patent: 5167232 (1992-12-01), Parker et al.
patent: 5168230 (1992-12-01), Hashoian et al.
patent: 5196796 (1993-03-01), Misic et al.
patent: 5216367 (1993-06-01), Mori
patent: 5258717 (1993-11-01), Misic et al.
patent: 5363845 (1994-11-01), Chowdbury et al.
patent: 5417213 (1995-05-01), Prince
patent: 5430378 (1995-07-01), Jones
patent: 5432449 (1995-07-01), Ferut et al.
patent: 5471142 (1995-11-01), Wang
patent: 5477146 (1995-12-01), Jones
patent: 5517120 (1996-05-01), Misic et al.
patent: 5521506 (1996-05-01), Misic et al.
patent: 5553619 (1996-09-01), Prince
patent: 5579767 (1996-12-01), Prince
patent: 5590654 (1997-01-01), Prince
patent: 5594337 (1997-01-01), Boskamp
patent: 5610520 (1997-03-01), Misic
patent: 5666055 (1997-09-01), Jones et al.
patent: 6134465 (2000-10-01), Frederick et al.
patent: 6498489 (2002-12-01), Vij
patent: 197 09 244 (1998-06-01), None
patent: 390 476 (1990-10-01), None
patent: 758 091 (1997-02-01), None
patent: 803 736 (1997-10-01), None
Roemer, et al., The NMR Phased Array, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 16, pp. 192-255, (1990).
Medical Advances, Peripheral Vascular Coil, promotional brochure (Apr. 1997).
Kojima, K. Y., et al., “Lower Extremities: MR Angiography with a Unilateral Telescopic Phased-Array Coli,” Radiology, vol. 196: pp. 871-875 (1995).
Jones, R. W., et al., “Minimization of Noise Contributions i
Adams Bradley J.
Augustine Lisa A.
Bell, Jr. Robert S.
Belt Kenneth W.
Lewandowski Stanley R.
Arana Louis
Medrad Inc.
Stevenson James R.
LandOfFree
Circuit for selectively enabling and disabling coils of a... does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.
If you have personal experience with Circuit for selectively enabling and disabling coils of a..., we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Circuit for selectively enabling and disabling coils of a... will most certainly appreciate the feedback.
Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-3194011