K Craig Goodrich

University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

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Publications (19)48.41 Total impact

  • Article: Superelliptical insert gradient coil with a field-modifying layer for breast imaging.
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    ABSTRACT: Many MRI applications such as dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI of the breast require high spatial and temporal resolution and can benefit from improved gradient performance, e.g., increased gradient strength and reduced gradient rise time. The improved gradient performance required to achieve high spatial and temporal resolution for this application may be achieved by using local insert gradients specifically designed for a target anatomy. Current flat gradient systems cannot create an imaging volume large enough to accommodate both breasts; further, their gradient fields are not homogeneous, dropping off rapidly with distance from the gradient coil surface. To attain an imaging volume adequate for bilateral breast MRI, a planar local gradient system design has been modified into a superellipse shape, creating homogeneous gradient volumes that are 182% (Gx), 57% (Gy), and 75% (Gz) wider (left/right direction) than those of the corresponding standard planar gradient. Adding an additional field-modifying gradient winding results in an additional improvement of the homogeneous gradient field near the gradient coil surface over the already enlarged homogeneous gradient volumes of the superelliptical gradients (67%, 89%, and 214% for Gx, Gy, and Gz respectively). A prototype y-gradient insert has been built to demonstrate imaging and implementation characteristics of the superellipse gradient in a 3 T MRI system.
    Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 10/2010; 65(3):863-72. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: Design, Fabrication and Testing of an Insertable Double-Imaging-Region Gradient Coil.
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    ABSTRACT: We have constructed a small-bore insertable gradient coil with two linear gradient imaging regions and interfaced it with an MRI scanner. We have also constructed an RF system capable of transmitting or receiving in both regions simultaneously.Designs for conductor placement for two-region X-, Y- and Z-gradient coils were optimized by simulated annealing. Wire patterns for each axis were chosen that gave low inductance, reasonable homogeneity over a large imaging volume and high efficiency (gradient field per-unit-current).Imaging was performed on a Siemens 3T TIM Trio scanner equipped with three additional gradient amplifier channels and a second RF/gradient array controller. Phantoms were placed in the two imaging regions as well as the central non-imaging region to test gradient homogeneity and crosstalk between regions. Images acquired simultaneously in the two regions showed very little signal crosstalk between imaging regions and even less signal from the central, non-imaging region.When combined with an overlapping single-region gradient insert, extended field-of-view (FOV) imaging will be possible without moving the table or the subject and without increasing nerve stimulation. Construction and testing of a two-region gradient coil insert is a necessary intermediate step as a proof of concept for an extended field of view, contiguous, three-region human-sized gradient system.
    Concepts in Magnetic Resonance Part B Magnetic Resonance Engineering 04/2009; 35B(2):98-105. · 0.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Magnetic Resonance Imaging with Composite (Dual) Gradients.
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    ABSTRACT: The tradeoff between gradient performance factors, size of the imaging region, and physiological factors such as nerve stimulation typically leads to compromises in gradient design and ultimately suboptimal imaging performance. Local gradient systems can add some performance flexibility, but are cumbersome to set up and remove. In nearly all conventional MRI systems, the use of local gradients precludes the use of the more homogeneous whole body gradients. This paper presents the concept of dynamically selectable composite gradient systems where local gradients and whole body gradients can be selected independently and simultaneously. The relative performance of whole body, insert, and composite gradients is predicted for echoplanar (EPI), turbo spin echo (TSE), and steady state free precession (SSFP). A realization of the concept is presented.
    Concepts in Magnetic Resonance Part B Magnetic Resonance Engineering 04/2009; 35(2):89-97. · 0.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Local bi‐planar gradient array design using conformal mapping and simulated annealing
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    ABSTRACT: Many magnetic resonance imaging applications require high spatial and temporal resolution. The improved gradient performance required to achieve high spatial and temporal resolution may be achieved by using local gradient coils such as planar gradient inserts. The planar gradient set provides higher gradient performance because it is placed inside of the imaging bore of the magnet (within the body gradients) in close proximity to the imaging region. Although the wire patterns for planar gradients can be designed using two dimensional stream functions and simulated annealing, optimization of the two dimensional stream functions can be much more computationally intensive and time consuming than optimizing the one dimensional stream functions required for cylindrical gradients. To address this problem, we have developed a simple and rapid method for the design of planar gradient inserts to produce a high strength local gradient field and a reasonably uniform imaging region. By using conformal mapping, the two dimensional problem can be simplified to a faster and more easily calculated one dimensional problem. The mapping transforms the magnetic field and wire patterns in the cylindrical system into a magnetic field and wire patterns in the bi-planar geometry providing a tool for bi-planar gradient coil design using a one dimensional stream function. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Concepts Magn Reson Part B (Magn Reson Engineering) 35B: 23–31, 2009
    Concepts in Magnetic Resonance Part B Magnetic Resonance Engineering 02/2009; 35B(1):23 - 31. · 0.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Longitudinal assessment of hyperplasia using magnetic resonance imaging without contrast in a porcine arteriovenous graft model.
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    ABSTRACT: Chronic hemodialysis requires a vascular access that provides high blood-flow rates for the extracorporeal recirculation of blood. Synthetic arteriovenous (AV) grafts often fail because of clotting caused by underlying hyperplasia formation. The authors report the use of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (MRI) without contrast agent to monitor tissue hyperplasia formation as well as luminal area in a porcine model of AV graft stenosis. Expanded reinforced polytetrafluoroethylene grafts were surgically placed between the common carotid artery and the external jugular vein, bilaterally, in pigs. Animals underwent MRI in a 3-T scanner at 3, 4, or 6 weeks after graft placement, followed by euthanasia and the collection of grafts and adjacent tissues for histologic analysis. Two animals underwent sequential scanning at 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7 weeks after graft placement, followed by histologic analysis. Measurements of hyperplasia obtained from the MR images were compared with, and correlated well with, measurements obtained from the histologic cross-sections (r = 0.932, P = .02). The MR images provided a more complete view of the venous hyperplasia throughout the graft compared with histology. The MR images could be examined from multiple angles and were unaffected by histologic preparation artifacts. Unlike histology, MRI provided longitudinal 3-dimensional views of hyperplasia within the AV grafts. This ability of MRI to more completely identify the geometry of hyperplasia and to quantify the tissue volume in vivo could provide benefits over histologic analysis in assessing the pathology of AV graft failure and the efficacy of antihyperplasia interventions.
    Academic radiology 02/2009; 16(1):96-107. · 2.09 Impact Factor
  • Article: Isolated kidney phantom for development of biothermal vascular models with application to high intensity focused ultrasound therapy.
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    ABSTRACT: A methodology using magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) is presented for identifying thermally significant blood vessels in isolated kidneys, specifically for use in biothermal model development with application to high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU). A combination of a proven preservation technique, newly developed MR-compatible experimental procedures and the refinement of MR pulse sequence parameters was used to determine vascular characteristics using high-resolution three-dimensional time-of-flight MRA image of flow through isolated kidneys. Results presented are twofold. First, improved vessel visibility was attained through decreasing the magnetic resonance imaging bandwidth from 150 to 30 Hz/pixel while simultaneously increasing the echo time, repetition time, and flip angle; vascular center line extraction showed an 18% improvement in the number of vessel segments detected and a 23% increase in length of the terminal segments over a base line technique without improvements. Second, the overall system was shown to be practical to determine vascular flow effects during HIFU heating; testing results from heating the kidney with HIFU are presented, showing a decrease of average kidney temperature with an increase of flow rate through the kidney with localized cooling demonstrated surrounding known vessel locations.
    Medical Physics 11/2008; 35(10):4426-34. · 2.83 Impact Factor
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    Article: Relative RF coil performance in carotid imaging.
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    ABSTRACT: Computer simulations and measurements on human volunteers were used to test the extent to which the quality of carotid imaging might be improved by coil arrays that are not limited by a constraint on the number of RF coil receiver ports. Analytic near-field equations for the magnetic and electric fields of a rectangular loop resonator were used to estimate the relative signal-to-noise ratio (rSNR) along the length of a simulated carotid artery as a function of loop size, loop position and vessel depth. The sizes, positions and number of elements in a linear coil array that resulted in the maximum composite SNR along the length of a simulated carotid artery were then estimated. The linear array results were used to predict the total number of elements needed for optimal imaging of the carotid arteries. Also, three normal volunteers were imaged with a variety of RF coils, and the rSNR measurements along the lengths of the carotid artery were evaluated for each coil combination. The analytic simulation and the human volunteer measurements both show that improved SNR (e.g., >300% at the bifurcation) can be obtained with coils tailored to each specific region of the carotid artery in comparison to that obtained with four-element arrays designed and used to image the entire carotid artery. The resulting number of coil ports, 16 to 24, required for full coverage of the carotid arteries is consistent with the number of channels just becoming available on recently developed clinical scanners.
    Magnetic Resonance Imaging 07/2005; 23(5):629-39. · 1.99 Impact Factor
  • Article: Contrast-enhanced MRI with new biodegradable macromolecular Gd(III) complexes in tumor-bearing mice.
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    ABSTRACT: The structures of polydisulfide-based biodegradable macromolecular Gd(III) complexes were modified to improve their in vivo retention time and MRI contrast enhancement. Steric hindrance was introduced around the disulfide bonds to control their access to free thiols in order to alter the degradation rate of the copolymers. Two new macromolecular agents, (Gd-DTPA)-cystine copolymers (GDCP) and (Gd-DTPA)-cystine diethyl ester copolymers (GDCEP), were prepared. Both agents were readily degraded in vitro and in vivo by the disulfide-thiol exchange reaction, but at a slow rate. The introduction of COOH and COOEt groups slowed down the degradation of the copolymers in the incubation with 15 microM cysteine. Metabolic degradation products were identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry in the urine samples from rats injected with the agents. The T(1) relaxivity (r(1)) was 5.43 mM(-1)s(-1) for GDCP, and 5.86 mM(-1)s(-1) for GDCEP, respectively, at 3T. MRI contrast enhancement of both agents was studied in nude mice bearing MDA-BM-231 human breast carcinoma xenografts, on a Siemens Trio 3T scanner. The modified agents resulted in more significant contrast enhancement in the blood pool and tumor periphery than (Gd-DTPA)-cystamine copolymers (GDCC) and a low-molecular-weight control agent, Gd-(DTPA-BMA), at a dose of 0.1 mmol-Gd/kg. The results demonstrate that the structural modification of the biodegradable macromolecular Gd(III) complexes resulted in a relatively slow degradation of the macromolecules and significantly improved in vivo contrast enhancement. The modified agents show promise for use in investigations of blood pool and cancer by contrast-enhanced (CE) MRI.
    Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 05/2005; 53(4):835-42. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: High-resolution time-resolved contrast-enhanced 3D MRA by combining SENSE with keyhole and SLAM strategies.
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    ABSTRACT: Sensitivity encoding (SENSE) was combined with keyhole and selective line acquisition mode (SLAM) techniques to acquire a time series of images during contrast passage. The acquisition speed of the dynamic time frames was improved by a factor of 8 in total. The high spatial frequencies were sampled during the steady state and combined with the dynamic time frames to construct a series of high-resolution time-resolved contrast-enhanced 3D images. Filtered temporal correlation analysis was used to separate the arteries and veins.
    Magnetic Resonance Imaging 12/2004; 22(9):1161-8. · 1.99 Impact Factor
  • Article: The arthrotropism of macromolecules in adjuvant-induced arthritis rat model: a preliminary study.
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    ABSTRACT: To study the accumulation of macromolecules into the arthritic joints and the possible applications of such phenomenon. The accumulation of plasma albumin in the joints of adjuvant-induced arthritis (AIA) rat model was first visualized with Evans blue injection. A N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide (HPMA) copolymer contrast agent was then synthesized and injected into the AIA rats to allow qualitative examination of biodistribution and pharmacokinetics of the injected macromolecule with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Vital organs and the diseased joints were isolated and examined histologically to correlate with the MRI findings. Deep blue color developed around the arthritic joints of the AIA rat a few hours after the injection of Evans blue. MR imaging of the AIA rats injected with polymer contrast agent demonstrated a gradual but very strong accumulation of the injected polymer in the arthritic joints, which lasted for 1-2 days. Observed differences in the concentration of the injected polymer in the joints correlated with disease severity as assessed histologically. Profound arthrotropism of macromolecules in the AIA rat model was demonstrated with various imaging tools. These observations should help in the conceptual and practical design of novel macromolecular delivery systems for the imaging and treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.
    Pharmaceutical Research 11/2004; 21(10):1741-9. · 4.09 Impact Factor
  • Article: Statistics-based approach for aneurysm volume measurements.
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    ABSTRACT: To evaluate the ability of high-resolution MRA to monitor changes in intracranial aneurysm volume, and devise a highly reliable technique for obtaining these measurements. To obtain a baseline estimate of the repeatability of MRA scans and validate the statistics-based technique for aneurysm volume measurement, multiple scans were obtained on individual subjects over a period of up to 1 year. These 3D MRA data sets were coregistered and then analyzed using the volumetric analysis of segmented data and the proposed statistical method. It was shown that high-resolution MRA provides highly repeatable data sets. Both methods used for the aneurysm volume measurements showed consistent results. However, the proposed statistical method had lower error and was much less sensitive to the choice of segmentation parameter than the volumetric analysis of segmented data. A change of 1 mm in the average radius of the aneurysm was detectable with the statistics-based technique. This study demonstrates that the statistical method of aneurysm volume measurement in high-resolution MRA allows reliable and accurate assessments of aneurysm volume changes.
    Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging 09/2004; 20(2):340-6. · 2.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: Extracellular biodegradable macromolecular gadolinium(III) complexes for MRI.
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    ABSTRACT: The clinical application of macromolecular gadolinium (Gd) complexes as MRI contrast agents is limited by the slow excretion of Gd(III) complexes and consequent long-term tissue accumulation of toxic Gd ions. To alleviate the problem of slow excretion, biodegradable polydisulfide-based macromolecular Gd(III) complexes were designed and prepared based on the disulfide-thiol exchange to allow degradation of the macromolecules by endogenous thiols and to facilitate excretion of Gd(III) complexes after the MRI examination. The in vitro degradation study showed that the polydisulfide agent was readily degraded by cysteine at plasma thiol concentrations. No cross-reaction was observed between the cysteine-34 on human serum albumin (HSA) with the agent. Concentration-dependent blood pool contrast enhancement was observed for the polydisulfide agents. The agents of both high molecular weight (35,000 Da) and low molecular weight (17,700 Da) produced significant contrast enhancement in the heart and aorta in rats at relatively high doses. Except for the bladder, the signal intensities gradually decreased over time. Significant blood pool contrast enhancement was also observed for the high molecular weight agent at a low dose (0.03 mmol-Gd/kg), but not for the agent with a lower molecular weight. The contrast enhancement in the urinary bladder increased over time for the polydisulfide agents and Gd(III)-(DTPA-BMA). Degradation products were identified by mass spectrometry in the urine samples from the rats administered with both polydisulfide agents, which confirmed that the polydisulfide agents were degraded in vivo and excreted through renal filtration. The preliminary results demonstrated the in vitro and in vivo degradability, superior blood pool contrast enhancement, and rapid clearance through renal filtration of the novel biodegradable macromolecular agent. This agent has a great potential for further preclinical and clinical development with application in contrast-enhanced blood pool and cancer MR imaging.
    Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 02/2004; 51(1):27-34. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: The need for phase-encoding flow compensation in high-resolution intracranial magnetic resonance angiography.
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    ABSTRACT: To demonstrate that the time delay between phase and frequency encoding and the presence of pulsatile blood flow in high-resolution time-of-flight (TOF) imaging of the intracranial arteries (especially near the circle of Willis) can distort the appearance of blood vessels and result in a cross-hatch-appearing artifact in surrounding tissue. Two techniques to reduce the artifact, tri-directional flow compensation (3DFC) and elliptical-centric (EC) phase-encoding order, are investigated in five volunteer studies. 3DFC eliminates the pulsation-related artifacts and the vessel distortion. A residual amplitude variation artifact is observed. EC phase encoding nearly eliminates the pulsatile motion-related artifact, but it does not eliminate vessel distortion. The combination of 3DFC and EC phase encoding appears to provide the greatest artifact reduction in the five volunteer studies performed.
    Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging 08/2003; 18(1):121-7. · 2.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: Improved efficiency in double-inversion fast spin-echo imaging.
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    ABSTRACT: Double-inversion fast spin-echo (FSE) pulse sequences can be designed to provide excellent suppression of blood signal in black-blood MRI. However, because a nonselective inversion is used, these sequences typically have been highly inefficient. In this work it is demonstrated that the efficiency of double-inversion sequences can be greatly improved by a form of interleaving in which all of the slices to be imaged in a single pass are reinverted each time a signal is obtained from any single slice. To date, several studies have demonstrated a high level of blood suppression with these more efficient techniques.
    Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 06/2002; 47(5):1017-21. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: Optimized visualization of vessels in contrast enhanced intracranial MR angiography
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    ABSTRACT: In this study, the problem of small vessel visualization in magnetic resonance angiography is addressed. The loss of vessel contrast due to slow flow-related signal saturation can be compensated by the T1 reduction obtained from the use of an MR contrast agent, such as Gd-DTPA. The vesselfbackground signal-difference-to-noise ratio (SDNR) is shown to strongly depend on the imaging parameters, as well as on the time course of the blood T1 values obtained from the contrast injection. Specifically, it was found that vessel SDNR increases almost linearly with TR, if the sampling bandwidth is reduced proportionately.
    Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 11/1998; 40(6):873 - 882. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Conference Proceeding: Two Alternative Forced Choice Evaluation of Vessel Visibility Increases Due to Zero-filled Interpolation in MR Angiography.
    Information Processing in Medical Imaging, 15th International Conference, IPMI'97, Poultney, Vermont, USA, June 9-13, 1997, Proceedings; 01/1997
  • Article: The application of magnetization transfer to MR angiography with reduced total power
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    ABSTRACT: Magnetization transfer (MT) techniques have been shown to significantly reduce background soft-tissue signal in time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography. To achieve sufficient suppression, radio frequency (RF) pulses with tip angles on the order of 1000 degrees are typically used, resulting in significant RF power deposition in the patient. Although these power deposition levels do not exceed the FDA guidelines, they are significantly higher than those used in typical imaging techniques. The use of these same magnetization transfer pulses in applications at field strengths higher than 1.5 T will require MT power levels which exceed FDA safety standards. This report demonstrates that the total power deposition required to achieve background tissue suppression can be significantly reduced by the application of the saturation pulses only during the phase-encoding steps corresponding to the central portion of “k space.” This technique allows equivalent soft tissue suppression with approximately 10% of the energy deposition of conventional magnetization transfer techniques.
    Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 07/1995; 34(2):283 - 286. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: PEG-g-poly(GdDTPA-co-L-cystine): a biodegradable macromolecular blood pool contrast agent for MR imaging.
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    ABSTRACT: Biodegradable PEGylated Gd-DTPA l-cystine copolymers, PEG-g-poly(GdDTPA-co-l-cystine), were prepared and tested as a blood pool contrast agent in mice. The biodegradable macromolecular agent was designed to be broken down into smaller Gd complexes by endogenous thiols via the disulfide-thiol exchange reaction to facilitate the clearance of Gd complexes after the contrast-enhanced MRI examination. Gd-DTPA l-cystine copolymers were synthesized by condensation polymerization of l-cystine and DTPA-dianhydride in water followed by chelating with Gd(OAc)(3). MPEG-NH(2) (MW = 2000) was then conjugated to the polymeric backbone in different ratios. The macromolecular contrast agent was readily degraded with the incubation of l-cysteine. It also demonstrated superior contrast enhancement in the heart and blood vessels as compared to a low molecular weight control agent, Gd-(DTPA-BMA). At 1 h postcontrast, the PEGylated macromolecular agent still showed prominent enhancement, while little contrast enhancement was detectable in the blood pool by the control agent. PEG-g-poly(GdDTPA-co-l-cystine) shows promise as an MR blood pool imaging agent.
    Bioconjugate Chemistry 15(6):1424-30. · 4.93 Impact Factor
  • Article: Poly(l-glutamic acid) Gd(III)-DOTA conjugate with a degradable spacer for magnetic resonance imaging.
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    ABSTRACT: The clinical application of macromolecular Gd(III) complexes as MRI contrast agents is impeded by their slow excretion and potential toxicity due to the release of Gd(III) ions caused by the metabolism of the agents. A polymer Gd(III) chelate conjugate with a cleavable spacer has been designed to solve this problem. Poly(l-glutamic acid)-cystamine-[Gd(III)-DOTA] was prepared by the conjugation of DOTA to PGA (MW = 50,000) via cystamine, a cleavable disulfide spacer, followed by the complexation with GdCl(3). A Gd(III) DOTA chelate derivative was readily released from the polymer conjugate in the incubation with cysteine, an endogenous plasma thiol. The conjugate produced significant MRI blood pool contrast enhancement in nude mice bearing OVCAR-3 human ovarian carcinoma xenographs. Less significant contrast enhancement was observed for a small molecular contrast agent, Gd(DTPA-BMA). The pharmacokinetic MRI study showed that the Gd(III) chelate from the conjugate accumulated in the urinary bladder in a similar kinetic pattern to Gd(DTPA-BMA), suggesting that the chelate was released by the endogenous thiols and excreted through renal filtration. The preliminary results suggest that this novel design has a great potential to solve the safety problem of macromolecular MRI contrast agents.
    Bioconjugate Chemistry 14(4):715-9. · 4.93 Impact Factor