Guillaume Ferrand
Université Paris-Saclay
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Featured researches published by Guillaume Ferrand.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2017
Elodie Georget; Michel Luong; Alexandre Vignaud; Eric Giacomini; Edouard Chazel; Guillaume Ferrand; Alexis Amadon; Franck Mauconduit; Stefan Enoch; Gérard Tayeb; Nicolas Bonod; Cyril Poupon; Redha Abdeddaim
Parallel transmission is a very promising method to tackle B1+ field inhomogeneities at ultrahigh field in magnetic resonant imaging (MRI). This technique is however limited by the mutual coupling between the radiating elements. Here we propose to solve this problem by designing a passive magneto-electric resonator that we here refer to as stacked magnetic resonator (SMR). By combining numerical and experimental methodologies, we prove that this novelty passive solution allows an efficient decoupling of elements of a phased-array coil. We demonstrate the ability of this technique to significantly reduce by more than 10dB the coupling preserving the quality of images compared to ideally isolated linear resonators on a spherical salty agar gel phantom in a 7T MRI scanner.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Vincent Gras; Markus Boland; Alexandre Vignaud; Guillaume Ferrand; Alexis Amadon; Franck Mauconduit; Denis Le Bihan; Tony Stöcker; Nicolas Boulant
Parallel transmission (pTx) technology, despite its great potential to mitigate the transmit field inhomogeneity problem in magnetic resonance imaging at ultra-high field (UHF), suffers from a cumbersome calibration procedure, thereby making the approach problematic for routine use. The purpose of this work is to demonstrate on two different 7T systems respectively equipped with 8-transmit-channel RF coils from two different suppliers (Rapid-Biomed and Nova Medical), the benefit of so-called universal pulses (UP), optimized to produce uniform excitations in the brain in a population of adults and making unnecessary the calibration procedures mentioned above. Non-selective and slice-selective UPs were designed to return homogeneous excitation profiles throughout the brain simultaneously on a group of ten subjects, which then were subsequently tested on ten additional volunteers in magnetization prepared rapid gradient echo (MPRAGE) and multi-slice gradient echo (2D GRE) protocols. The results were additionally compared experimentally with the standard non-pTx circularly-polarized (CP) mode, and in simulation with subject-specific tailored excitations. For both pulse types and both coils, the UP mode returned a better signal and contrast homogeneity than the CP mode. Retrospective analysis of the flip angle (FA) suggests that the FA deviation from the nominal FA on average over a healthy adult population does not exceed 11% with the calibration-free parallel-transmit pulses whereas it goes beyond 25% with the CP mode. As a result the universal pulses designed in this work confirm their relevance in 3D and 2D protocols with commercially available equipment. Plug-and-play pTx implementations henceforth become accessible to exploit with more flexibility the potential of UHF for brain imaging.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2017
Morgane Le Garrec; Vincent Gras; Marie-France Hang; Guillaume Ferrand; Michel Luong; Nicolas Boulant
Specific absorption rate (SAR) calculations in parallel transmission are commonly performed by using electromagnetic simulations on generic models. In this study, we propose a probabilistic analysis to study the safety factor employed to account for SAR intersubject variability versus risk relationship in head imaging at 7T.
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering | 2013
Maxim Zhadobov; Guillaume Ferrand; Michel Luong; Yonis Soubere; Catherine Le Quément; Pierre-Henri Carton; Yves Piret; Ronan Sauleau; Yves Le Dréan
A new setup for exposure of human cells in vitro at 37 °C to pulse-modulated 300 and 500 MHz signals of future magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) systems is designed, built up, and characterized. Two dipole antennas, specifically designed for ultrahigh field MRI, are used as radiating structures. The electromagnetic (EM) field distribution inside the incubator containing the cells is computed, and it is shown to be in a good agreement with measurements. The electric field at the cell level is quantified numerically. Local, 1-g average, and averaged over the culture medium volume SAR are provided along with the standard deviation values for each well. Temperature increments are measured inside the culture medium during the exposure using an optical fiber thermometer. Then, we identify the pulse parameters corresponding to the thermal threshold of 1 °C, usually considered as a threshold for thermally induced biological effects. For these parameters, the induction of heat shock proteins is assessed to biologically verify a potential thermal response of cells. The data demonstrate that, under the considered experimental conditions, exposure to pulse-modulated radiations emulating typical ultrahigh field MRI signals, corresponding to temperature increments below 1 °C, does not trigger any heat shock response in human brain cells.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
Guillaume Ferrand; Gaspard Huber; Michel Luong; Hervé Desvaux
Concepts in Magnetic Resonance Part B-magnetic Resonance Engineering | 2015
Guillaume Ferrand; Michel Luong; Gaspard Huber; Hervé Desvaux
Archive | 2015
Guillaume Ferrand; Michel Luong
BEMS 2013 | 2013
Yonis Soubere Mahamoud; Catherine Le Quément; Maxim Zhadobov; Guillaume Ferrand; R. Le Guevel; Michel Luong; Pierre-Henri Carton; Yves Piret; Ronan Sauleau; Yves Le Dréan
BEMS 2013 | 2013
Maxim Zhadobov; Guillaume Ferrand; Michel Luong; Yonis Soubere Mahamoud; Pierre-Henri Carton; Yves Piret; Ronan Sauleau; Yves Le Dréan
Journées Scientifiques 2012 d'URSI-France, Champs électromagnetiques : de la dosimétrie à la santé humaine | 2012
Yonis Soubere Mahamoud; Catherine Le Quément; Maxim Zhadobov; Guillaume Ferrand; R. Le Guevel; Pierre-Henri Carton; Michel Luong; Ronan Sauleau; Yves Le Dréan