Electricity: measuring and testing – Particle precession resonance – Spectrometer components
Reexamination Certificate
2003-04-03
2004-11-30
Arana, Louis (Department: 2859)
Electricity: measuring and testing
Particle precession resonance
Spectrometer components
C324S322000, C324S315000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06825664
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (“MRI”) systems are well known in the art and widely used in medicine. These systems typically include a magnet system for generating a steady magnetic field, a magnet system for generating gradient fields, and an RF transmitter coil for generating an RF field which excites nuclei in a patient for magnetic resonance. The magnetic resonance signal is detected by the RF transmitter coil or by a special RF receiver coil or coils.
Three important parameters to evaluate an RF receive coil are signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), homogeneity, and field-of-view (“FOV”) coverage. The SNR may be defined as the ratio between the signal strength on the image and the background noise. An RF coil typically achieves a higher SNR when it is closer to the part of the patient being imaged.
The homogeneity measures signal sensitivity variation in the RF coil. The receiving sensitivity of the RF receiver coil generally decreases with increasing distance from the coil wires.
The FOV refers to the region required to be covered by the RF coil. A large RF coil such as the body coil provides a large FOV coverage, but the MRI signals detected with such a coil have low SNR. By contrast, a small RF coil provides only a small FOV coverage but has a higher SNR.
A system offering both a higher SNR and larger FOV coverage is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,825,162 to Roemer. The Roemer patent teaches an RF coil construction for an MRI apparatus. The Roemer coil construction includes several single-loop coil elements arranged in a phased array to increase the FOV coverage and SNR of the images. The coil elements overlap each other and include tuning and matching capacitors.
The invention described in the Roemer patent has disadvantages. For example, the SNR of the RF coil construction in the Roemer patent is limited by the SNR of its individual coil elements. Consequently, there is a need in the art for an alternating system that further increases its SNR by increasing the SNR of its coil elements.
SUMMARY AND OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
A first object of the present invention is to provide a new method of coil construction for use in MRI systems.
A second object of the present invention is to provide a cryogenically cooled RF coil to improve the signal-to-noise ratio over that detected by conventionally constructed coils.
A third object of the invention is to provide a cryogenically cooled phased array of RF coils to increase the field of view coverage over single cryogenically cooled coils.
These and other objects and features of the present invention are accomplished as embodied and fully described herein according to the invention, by the RF coil construction and arrangement discussed below.
The RF coil construction of the present invention includes a device for cryogenically cooling RF coils and at least two receiver coil elements cryogenically cooled by that device, and forming an array. Each coil element includes at least two capacitors for tuning and matching the coil. A circuit may be connected to each coil element to decouple that coil element from the transmitter coil(s), and to decouple that coil element from other coil elements.
With these and other objects, advantages and features of the invention that may become hereinafter apparent, the nature of the invention may be more clearly understood by reference to the following detailed description of the invention, the appended claims and the accompanying drawings.
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Kwok Wingchi Edmund
You Zhigang
Zhong Jianhui
Arana Louis
Blank Rome LLP
University of Rochester
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