MRI Conditional Actively Tracked Metallic Electrophysiology Catheters and Guidewires With Miniature Tethered Radio-Frequency Traps: Theory, Design, and Validation

IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2020 Jun;67(6):1616-1627. doi: 10.1109/TBME.2019.2941460. Epub 2019 Sep 13.

Abstract

Objective: Cardiovascular interventional devices typically have long metallic braids or backbones to aid in steerability and pushability. However, electromagnetic coupling of metallic-based cardiovascular interventional devices with the radiofrequency (RF) fields present during Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) can make a device unsafe for use in an MRI scanner. We aimed to develop MRI conditional actively-tracked cardiovascular interventional devices by sufficiently attenuating induced currents on the metallic braid/tube and internal-cabling using miniaturized resonant floating RF traps (MBaluns).

Method: MBaluns were designed for placement at multiple locations along a conducting cardiovascular device to prevent the establishment of standing waves and to dissipate RF-induced energy. The MBaluns were constructed with loosely-wound solenoids to be sensitive to transverse magnetic fields created by both surface currents on the device's metallic backbone and common-mode currents on internal cables. Electromagnetic simulations were used to optimize MBalun parameters. Following optimization, two different MBalun designs were applied to MR-actively-tracked metallic guidewires and metallic-braided electrophysiology ablation catheters. Control-devices were constructed without MBaluns. MBalun performance was validated using network-analyzer quantification of current attenuation, electromagnetic Specific-Absorption-Rate (SAR) analysis, thermal tests during high SAR pulse sequences, and MRI-guided cardiovascular navigation in swine.

Results: Electromagnetic SAR simulations resulted in ≈20 dB attenuation at the tip of the wire using six successive MBaluns. Network-analyzer tests confirmed ∼17 dB/MBalun surface-current attenuation. Thermal tests indicated temperature decreases of 5.9 °C in the MBalun-equipped guidewire tip. Both devices allowed rapid vascular navigation resulting from good torquability and MR-Tracking visibility.

Conclusion: MBaluns increased device diameter by 20%, relative to conventional devices, providing a spatially-efficient means to prevent heating during MRI.

Significance: MBaluns allow use of long metallic components, which improves mechanical performance in active MR-guided interventional devices.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Catheters
  • Electrophysiology
  • Equipment Design
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
  • Phantoms, Imaging
  • Radio Waves*
  • Swine