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MR-based electrical property tomography using a physics-informed network at 3 and 7 T.

NMR in Biomedicine 2024 March 5
Magnetic resonance electrical propert tomography promises to retrieve electrical properties (EPs) quantitatively and non-invasively in vivo, providing valuable information for tissue characterization and pathology diagnosis. However, its clinical implementation has been hindered by, for example, B1 measurement accuracy, reconstruction artifacts resulting from inaccuracies in underlying models, and stringent hardware/software requirements. To address these challenges, we present a novel approach aimed at accurate and high-resolution EPs reconstruction based on water content maps by using a physics-informed network (PIN-wEPT). The proposed method utilizes standard clinical protocols and conventional multi-channel receive arrays that have been routinely equipped in clinical settings, thus eliminating the need for specialized RF sequence/coil configurations. Compared with the original wEPT method, the network generates accurate water content maps that effectively eliminate the influence of B → 1 + $$ {\overrightarrow{B}}_1^{+} $$ and B → 1 - $$ {\overrightarrow{B}}_1^{-} $$ by incorporating data mismatch with electrodynamic constraints derived from the Helmholtz equation. Subsequent regression analysis develops a broad relationship between water content and EPs across various types of brain tissue. A series of numerical simulations was conducted at 7 T to assess the feasibility and performance of the method, which encompassed four normal head models and models with tumorous tissues incorporated, and the results showed normalized mean square error below 1.0% in water content, below 11.7% in conductivity, and below 1.1% in permittivity reconstructions for normal brain tissues. Moreover, in vivo validations conducted over five healthy subjects at both 3 and 7 T showed reasonably good consistency with empirical EPs values across the white matter, gray matter, and cerebrospinal fluid. The PIN-wEPT method, with its demonstrated efficacy, flexibility, and compatibility with current MRI scanners, holds promising potential for future clinical application.

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