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Hydraulic Permeability reconstruction in Magnetic Resonance Elstography

ORAL

Abstract

Magnetic Resonance Elastography (MRE) is a rapidly developing, non-invasive, imaging technique for acquiring information about tissue properties similar to the way surgeons use manual palpation. At the mm3 voxel level, tissue is treated as a coarse grained medium - much of the MRE field has assumed that using a viscoelastic continuum is sufficient to characterize wave propogation within tissue. Poroelasticity, on the other hand, is a coarse grained description of a viscoelastic porous skeleton interacting with a fluid - qualitatively more in line with what we know tissue is like. I will explore recent advances made by our group in applying poroelasticity to MRE data, focusing on the inference of hydraulic permeability - a tissue's capacity for permitting fluid to filtrate through it - in both simulations and phantoms, paving the way for eventual clinical use.

Presenters

  • Damian Sowinski

    Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth College

Authors

  • Damian Sowinski

    Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth College

  • Matthew McGarry

    Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth College

  • Scott Gordon-Wiley

    Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth College

  • John Weaver

    Radiology, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center

  • Keith Paulsen

    Center for Surgical Innovation, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center