Quantification of MRI sensitivity for mono-disperse microbubbles to measure subatmospheric fluid pressure changes

Authors

  • Amgad Alrwaili
  • Martin Bencsik

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62721/diffusion-fundamentals.18.668

Keywords:

MRI, Pressure, Diffusion, Contrast Agent, Microbubbles

Abstract

It would be very beneficial to perform MRI of fluids and sense the fluid pressure changes. Our aim is to demonstrate a contrast agent capable of MR sensitivity to sub-atmospheric pressure changes. To achieve this, monodisperse microbubbles were prepared with an optically measured mean radius of 1.4 ± 0.8 μm. A repeated pressure change cycle was applied on the microbubble contrast agent, until it produced an MR signal change solely due to the bubble radius change. The bubbles’ contribution to the relaxation rate before and after applying sub-atmospheric pressure changes was estimated and its echo time dependence modelled, so as to inform the mean radius change. The periodic subatmospheric pressure change was further applied until the MR signal change was only due to the bubble radius change. An excellent MR sensitivity of 28 % bar-1 is demonstrated, bubble radii of 2.4 and 1.8 μm are numerically estimated before and after the application of pressure, and the simulations are further used to estimate the optimum bubble radius maximising the MR sensitivity to a small change in radius.

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Published

2013-07-01

How to Cite

Alrwaili, A., & Bencsik, M. (2013). Quantification of MRI sensitivity for mono-disperse microbubbles to measure subatmospheric fluid pressure changes. Diffusion Fundamentals, 18. https://doi.org/10.62721/diffusion-fundamentals.18.668

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