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Duke Innovations Improve Accuracy of MRI as Internal 'Thermometer'
[October 16, 2008]

Duke Innovations Improve Accuracy of MRI as Internal 'Thermometer'


DURHAM, N.C., Oct 16, 2008 (ASCRIBE NEWS via COMTEX) --
Duke
University chemists say they have developed a new way tomeasure
temperature changes inside the body with
unprecedented precision by correcting a subtle error in the
original theory underlying Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).
"We can get five to 10 times better accuracy in
temperature maps than is possible with the best possible
conventional methods," said Warren Warren, a Duke chemistry
professor who is corresponding author of a new report
appearing in the Oct. 17 issue of Science. The work was
funded by the National Institutes of Health.
The new technique "is suitable for imaging temperature in
a wide range of environments," added the report.
MRI is a radiation-free technology for imaging patients'
interior anatomies. It works because hydrogen atoms in
internal organs will broadcast their locations when
subjected to selected radio waves in the presence of a
strong, computer-programmable magnetic field.
MRI scans can also be used to estimate interior
temperature changes in procedures like hyperthermia cancer
therapy, where focused heat is used to kill internal
tumors. This is because the hydrogen atoms in water shift
their MRI broadcasting frequencies in a predictable way as
water temperatures change. And water is a major component of
molecules in bodily tissues.
Though precise in evaluating water temperature changes in
isolation, conventional MRI works imperfectly as an internal
thermometer within actual patients. That's because the
magnetic field's interactions with hydrogen atoms vary
widely within patients' bodies, and those interactions also
shift from minute to minute, Warren said.
"Current methods break down in the very systems that
are of greatest interest, those that are inhomogeneous and
that change with time," the report said. "As a result,
they only provide relative temperature maps," Warren
added. "So we're developing methods to do MRI differently."
The Duke group's approach involves selective detection of
what are called "intermolecular multiple quantum coherences
(iMQCs)" in hydrogen atoms. Warren said the use of iMQCs is
an application of his lab's 1998 correction of an early
"subtle mistake" in the way MRI's inventors exploited
quantum mechanical theory
While MRI theory sees nuclei of hydrogen as miniscule bar
magnets spinning in characteristic ways within magnetic
fields, it originally ignored certain interactions between
those spins, Warren said. "We had to completely rewrite
the theory of magnetic resonance to figure out where the
mistake was made," he added.
By incorporating these missing interactions, the Duke
chemists refined both the electronics and interpretation of
data from MRI scans to improve heat measurements.
The Duke method exploits three sets of facts: First,
water and fat never mix. Secondly, hydrogen atoms in water
respond to heat changes but those in fat don't. Thirdly,



water and fat molecules in the body are likely to be
positioned within tens of millionths of a meter (or microns)
of each other.
Fat and water molecules occurring so close together are
subjected to the same magnetic conditions, the Duke chemists
reasoned. So the differences between the two types of MRI
signals they emit should represent the effect of temperature
changes on the hydrogen in water. Calculating the effects of
iMQCs -- the subtle interactions between atomic spins --
further improves the accuracy of the comparison.
"So the difference between water and fat is an absolute
magnetic resonance thermometer," Warren said.
The Duke team's report notes that the technique has been
demonstrated in live rodents, including obese animals whose
cells mimic those in fatty breast tissue. Because of fat
cells' effects on magnetic fields, breast tissue cannot be
temperature-checked using conventional MRI, the report also
noted.
The technique could improve clinical applications of
hyperthermia against cancer, and also be applied in other
kinds of therapy, Warren suggested. "Temperature
regulation is an extremely important part of how biological
processes in us work," he said.
The first author of the Science report is Gigi Galiana,
who recently received her Ph.D. from Princeton
University. Warren's laboratory relocated in 2005 from
Princeton to Duke, where Galiana did most of her thesis
work. Other co-authors are Rosa Branca, a postdoctoral
researcher, and Elizabeth Jenista, a graduate student, at
the Duke lab.
_ _ _ _
CONTACTS: Warren Warren, the report's corresponding author,
can be reached for comment at [email protected]. For
media assistance contact Monte Basgall, 919-681-8057,
[email protected].
NOTE TO BROADCAST EDITORS: Duke provides an on-campus
satellite uplink facility for live or pre-recorded
television interviews. We are also equipped with ISDN
connectivity for radio interviews. Broadcast reporters
should contact the Office of Radio-TV Services at
919-681-8067 to arrange an interview.
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