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Increased Displacement in Magnetomotive Ultrasound Imaging by Adding a Homogeneous Magnetic Field

Reniaud, Jules LU ; Evertsson, Maria LU ; Andersson, Roger LU and Jansson, Tomas LU (2022) 2022 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS 2022 In IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS 2022-October. p.1-4
Abstract

Magnetomotive Ultrasound, MMUS, is an imaging modality used to reveal a magnetic contrast agent using an external time-varying inhomogeneous magnetic field. By this, the particles are set in motion, and the motion is detected with ultrasound. The technique has applications in cancer detection but is limited in penetration as the magnetic field decreases rapidly with distance. Instead of increasing the size of the conventionally used magnetic probe which would lead to heating and clinical practicality problems, adding a homogeneous magnetic field has been suggested to increase the force and thereby displacement. Since the magnetic force is proportional to both the magnetic field strength and the field gradient, the second homogeneous... (More)

Magnetomotive Ultrasound, MMUS, is an imaging modality used to reveal a magnetic contrast agent using an external time-varying inhomogeneous magnetic field. By this, the particles are set in motion, and the motion is detected with ultrasound. The technique has applications in cancer detection but is limited in penetration as the magnetic field decreases rapidly with distance. Instead of increasing the size of the conventionally used magnetic probe which would lead to heating and clinical practicality problems, adding a homogeneous magnetic field has been suggested to increase the force and thereby displacement. Since the magnetic force is proportional to both the magnetic field strength and the field gradient, the second homogeneous field will increase the force. The homogenous magnetic field was generated using a Helmholtz coil (2×150 turns) driven by an AC current (5 Hz, 4 A peak to peak) synchronized in phase with the rotating neodymium magnet generating the inhomogeneous field (also 5 Hz). The fields set in motion magnetic particles embedded in a tissue-mimicking material and the tissue motion was imaged using an ultrasound scanner (Visualsonics F2). The images were processed using a previously published algorithm to measure the axial component of the tissue motion. Adding the coil with a homogeneous field does increase the detected magneto-motion, in accordance with the theoretical model. A 40% increase was measured at a depth of 53mm for an additional 6mT magnetic field. This points to a possible way to increase the sensitivity in MMUS by adding a homogeneous magnetic field.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
iron-oxide nanoparticles, rotating permanent magnet, ultrasound
host publication
IUS 2022 - IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium
series title
IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS
volume
2022-October
pages
1 - 4
publisher
IEEE Computer Society
conference name
2022 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS 2022
conference location
Venice, Italy
conference dates
2022-10-10 - 2022-10-13
external identifiers
  • scopus:85143777634
ISSN
1948-5727
1948-5719
ISBN
9781665466578
DOI
10.1109/IUS54386.2022.9957813
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 IEEE.
id
d995346c-1cd8-49cd-878b-5f837152298b
date added to LUP
2024-11-21 14:04:14
date last changed
2025-07-04 09:41:06
@inproceedings{d995346c-1cd8-49cd-878b-5f837152298b,
  abstract     = {{<p>Magnetomotive Ultrasound, MMUS, is an imaging modality used to reveal a magnetic contrast agent using an external time-varying inhomogeneous magnetic field. By this, the particles are set in motion, and the motion is detected with ultrasound. The technique has applications in cancer detection but is limited in penetration as the magnetic field decreases rapidly with distance. Instead of increasing the size of the conventionally used magnetic probe which would lead to heating and clinical practicality problems, adding a homogeneous magnetic field has been suggested to increase the force and thereby displacement. Since the magnetic force is proportional to both the magnetic field strength and the field gradient, the second homogeneous field will increase the force. The homogenous magnetic field was generated using a Helmholtz coil (2×150 turns) driven by an AC current (5 Hz, 4 A peak to peak) synchronized in phase with the rotating neodymium magnet generating the inhomogeneous field (also 5 Hz). The fields set in motion magnetic particles embedded in a tissue-mimicking material and the tissue motion was imaged using an ultrasound scanner (Visualsonics F2). The images were processed using a previously published algorithm to measure the axial component of the tissue motion. Adding the coil with a homogeneous field does increase the detected magneto-motion, in accordance with the theoretical model. A 40% increase was measured at a depth of 53mm for an additional 6mT magnetic field. This points to a possible way to increase the sensitivity in MMUS by adding a homogeneous magnetic field.</p>}},
  author       = {{Reniaud, Jules and Evertsson, Maria and Andersson, Roger and Jansson, Tomas}},
  booktitle    = {{IUS 2022 - IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium}},
  isbn         = {{9781665466578}},
  issn         = {{1948-5727}},
  keywords     = {{iron-oxide nanoparticles; rotating permanent magnet; ultrasound}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1--4}},
  publisher    = {{IEEE Computer Society}},
  series       = {{IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS}},
  title        = {{Increased Displacement in Magnetomotive Ultrasound Imaging by Adding a Homogeneous Magnetic Field}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/IUS54386.2022.9957813}},
  doi          = {{10.1109/IUS54386.2022.9957813}},
  volume       = {{2022-October}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}