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Dive into the research topics where Lukas Winter is active.

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Featured researches published by Lukas Winter.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2014

Modular 32-channel transceiver coil array for cardiac MRI at 7.0T

Andreas Graessl; Wolfgang Renz; Fabian Hezel; Matthias A. Dieringer; Lukas Winter; Celal Oezerdem; Jan Rieger; Peter Kellman; Davide Santoro; Tomasz Lindel; Tobias Frauenrath; Harald Pfeiffer; Thoralf Niendorf

To design and evaluate a modular transceiver coil array with 32 independent channels for cardiac MRI at 7.0T.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2012

Two-Dimensional Sixteen Channel Transmit/Receive Coil Array for Cardiac MRI at 7.0 T: Design, Evaluation, and Application

Christof Thalhammer; Wolfgang Renz; Lukas Winter; Fabian Hezel; Jan Rieger; Harald Pfeiffer; Andreas Graessl; F. Seifert; Werner Hoffmann; Florian von Knobelsdorff-Brenkenhoff; Valeriy Tkachenko; Jeanette Schulz-Menger; Peter Kellman; Thoralf Niendorf

To design, evaluate, and apply a 2D 16‐channel transmit/receive (TX/RX) coil array tailored for cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 7.0 T.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Design and evaluation of a hybrid radiofrequency applicator for magnetic resonance imaging and RF induced hyperthermia: electromagnetic field simulations up to 14.0 Tesla and proof-of-concept at 7.0 Tesla.

Lukas Winter; Celal Özerdem; Werner Hoffmann; Davide Santoro; Alexander Müller; Helmar Waiczies; Reiner Seemann; Andreas Graessl; Peter Wust; Thoralf Niendorf

This work demonstrates the feasibility of a hybrid radiofrequency (RF) applicator that supports magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and MR controlled targeted RF heating at ultrahigh magnetic fields (B0≥7.0T). For this purpose a virtual and an experimental configuration of an 8-channel transmit/receive (TX/RX) hybrid RF applicator was designed. For TX/RX bow tie antenna electric dipoles were employed. Electromagnetic field simulations (EMF) were performed to study RF heating versus RF wavelength (frequency range: 64 MHz (1.5T) to 600 MHz (14.0T)). The experimental version of the applicator was implemented at B0 = 7.0T. The applicators feasibility for targeted RF heating was evaluated in EMF simulations and in phantom studies. Temperature co-simulations were conducted in phantoms and in a human voxel model. Our results demonstrate that higher frequencies afford a reduction in the size of specific absorption rate (SAR) hotspots. At 7T (298 MHz) the hybrid applicator yielded a 50% iso-contour SAR (iso-SAR-50%) hotspot with a diameter of 43 mm. At 600 MHz an iso-SAR-50% hotspot of 26 mm in diameter was observed. RF power deposition per RF input power was found to increase with B0 which makes targeted RF heating more efficient at higher frequencies. The applicator was capable of generating deep-seated temperature hotspots in phantoms. The feasibility of 2D steering of a SAR/temperature hotspot to a target location was demonstrated by the induction of a focal temperature increase (ΔT = 8.1 K) in an off-center region of the phantom. Temperature simulations in the human brain performed at 298 MHz showed a maximum temperature increase to 48.6C for a deep-seated hotspot in the brain with a size of (19×23×32)mm3 iso-temperature-90%. The hybrid applicator provided imaging capabilities that facilitate high spatial resolution brain MRI. To conclude, this study outlines the technical underpinnings and demonstrates the basic feasibility of an 8-channel hybrid TX/RX applicator that supports MR imaging, MR thermometry and targeted RF heating in one device.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2013

Progress and promises of human cardiac magnetic resonance at ultrahigh fields: A physics perspective

Thoralf Niendorf; Andreas Graessl; Christof Thalhammer; Matthias A. Dieringer; Oliver Kraus; Davide Santoro; Katharina Fuchs; Fabian Hezel; Sonia Waiczies; Bernd Ittermann; Lukas Winter

A growing number of reports eloquently speak about explorations into cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) at ultrahigh magnetic fields (B0≥7.0 T). Realizing the progress, promises and challenges of ultrahigh field (UHF) CMR this perspective outlines current trends in enabling MR technology tailored for cardiac MR in the short wavelength regime. For this purpose many channel radiofrequency (RF) technology concepts are outlined. Basic principles of mapping and shimming of transmission fields including RF power deposition considerations are presented. Explorations motivated by the safe operation of UHF-CMR even in the presence of conductive implants are described together with the physics, numerical simulations and experiments, all of which detailing antenna effects and RF heating induced by intracoronary stents at 7.0 T. Early applications of CMR at 7.0 T and their clinical implications for explorations into cardiovascular diseases are explored including assessment of cardiac function, myocardial tissue characterization, MR angiography of large and small vessels as well as heteronuclear MR of the heart and the skin. A concluding section ventures a glance beyond the horizon and explores future directions. The goal here is not to be comprehensive but to inspire the biomedical and diagnostic imaging communities to throw further weight behind the solution of the many remaining unsolved problems and technical obstacles of UHF-CMR with the goal to transfer MR physics driven methodological advancements into extra clinical value.


European Journal of Radiology | 2013

Design, evaluation and application of an eight channel transmit/receive coil array for cardiac MRI at 7.0 T.

Andreas Gräßl; Lukas Winter; Christof Thalhammer; Wolfgang Renz; Peter Kellman; Conrad Martin; Florian von Knobelsdorff-Brenkenhoff; Valeriy Tkachenko; Jeanette Schulz-Menger; Thoralf Niendorf

The objective of this work is to design, examine and apply an eight channel transmit/receive coil array tailored for cardiac magnetic resonance imaging at 7.0 T that provides image quality suitable for clinical use, patient comfort, and ease of use. The cardiac coil array was designed to consist of a planar posterior section and a modestly curved anterior section. For radio frequency (RF) safety validation, numerical computations of the electromagnetic field (EMF) and the specific absorption rate (SAR) distribution were conducted. In vivo cardiac imaging was performed using a 2D CINE FLASH technique. For signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) assessment reconstructed images were scaled in SNR units. The parallel imaging capabilities of the coil were examined using GRAPPA and SENSE reconstruction with reduction factors of up to R=4. The assessment of the RF characteristics yielded a maximum noise correlation of 0.33. The baseline SNR advantage at 7.0 T was put to use to acquire 2D CINE images of the heart with a spatial resolution of 1 mm × 1 mm × 4 mm. The coil array supports 1D acceleration factors of up to R=3 without impairing image quality significantly. For un-accelerated 2D CINE FLASH acquisitions the results revealed an SNR of approximately 140 for the left ventricular blood pool. Blood/myocardium contrast was found to be approximately 90 for un-accelerated 2D CINE FLASH acquisitions. The proposed 8 channel cardiac transceiver surface coil has the capability to acquire high contrast, high spatial and temporal resolution in vivo images of the heart at 7.0 T.


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2016

Magnetic resonance thermometry: Methodology, pitfalls and practical solutions

Lukas Winter; Eva Oberacker; Yiyi Ji; Celal Oezerdem; Pirus Ghadjar; Alexander Henry Thieme; Volker Budach; Peter Wust; Thoralf Niendorf

Abstract Clinically established thermal therapies such as thermoablative approaches or adjuvant hyperthermia treatment rely on accurate thermal dose information for the evaluation and adaptation of the thermal therapy. Intratumoural temperature measurements have been correlated successfully with clinical end points. Magnetic resonance imaging is the most suitable technique for non-invasive thermometry avoiding complications related to invasive temperature measurements. Since the advent of MR thermometry two decades ago, numerous MR thermometry techniques have been developed, continuously increasing accuracy and robustness for in vivo applications. While this progress was primarily focused on relative temperature mapping, current and future efforts will likely close the gap towards quantitative temperature readings. These efforts are essential to benchmark thermal therapy efficiency, to understand temperature-related biophysical and physiological processes and to use these insights to set new landmarks for diagnostic and therapeutic applications. With that in mind, this review summarises and discusses advances in MR thermometry, providing practical considerations, pitfalls and technical obstacles constraining temperature measurement accuracy, spatial and temporal resolution in vivo. Established approaches and current trends in thermal therapy hardware are surveyed with respect to potential benefits for MR thermometry.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Detailing Radio Frequency Heating Induced by Coronary Stents: A 7.0 Tesla Magnetic Resonance Study

Davide Santoro; Lukas Winter; Alexander Müller; Julia Vogt; Wolfgang Renz; Celal Özerdem; Andreas Grässl; Valeriy Tkachenko; Jeanette Schulz-Menger; Thoralf Niendorf

The sensitivity gain of ultrahigh field Magnetic Resonance (UHF-MR) holds the promise to enhance spatial and temporal resolution. Such improvements could be beneficial for cardiovascular MR. However, intracoronary stents used for treatment of coronary artery disease are currently considered to be contra-indications for UHF-MR. The antenna effect induced by a stent together with RF wavelength shortening could increase local radiofrequency (RF) power deposition at 7.0 T and bears the potential to induce local heating, which might cause tissue damage. Realizing these constraints, this work examines RF heating effects of stents using electro-magnetic field (EMF) simulations and phantoms with properties that mimic myocardium. For this purpose, RF power deposition that exceeds the clinical limits was induced by a dedicated birdcage coil. Fiber optic probes and MR thermometry were applied for temperature monitoring using agarose phantoms containing copper tubes or coronary stents. The results demonstrate an agreement between RF heating induced temperature changes derived from EMF simulations versus MR thermometry. The birdcage coil tailored for RF heating was capable of irradiating power exceeding the specific-absorption rate (SAR) limits defined by the IEC guidelines by a factor of three. This setup afforded RF induced temperature changes up to +27 K in a reference phantom. The maximum extra temperature increase, induced by a copper tube or a coronary stent was less than 3 K. The coronary stents examined showed an RF heating behavior similar to a copper tube. Our results suggest that, if IEC guidelines for local/global SAR are followed, the extra RF heating induced in myocardial tissue by stents may not be significant versus the baseline heating induced by the energy deposited by a tailored cardiac transmit RF coil at 7.0 T, and may be smaller if not insignificant than the extra RF heating observed under the circumstances used in this study.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2015

On the RF heating of coronary stents at 7.0 Tesla MRI

Lukas Winter; Eva Oberacker; Celal Özerdem; Yiyi Ji; Florian von Knobelsdorff-Brenkenhoff; Gerd Weidemann; Bernd Ittermann; F. Seifert; Thoralf Niendorf

Examine radiofrequency (RF) induced heating of coronary stents at 7.0 Tesla (T) to derive an analytical approach which supports RF heating assessment of arbitrary stent geometries and RF coils.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2016

16-channel bow tie antenna transceiver array for cardiac MR at 7.0 tesla

Celal Oezerdem; Lukas Winter; Andreas Graessl; Antje Els; Oliver Weinberger; Jan Rieger; Andre Kuehne; Matthias A. Dieringer; Fabian Hezel; Dirk Voit; Jens Frahm; Thoralf Niendorf

To design, evaluate, and apply a bow tie antenna transceiver radiofrequency (RF) coil array tailored for cardiac MRI at 7.0 Tesla (T).


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2013

Assessment of the right ventricle with cardiovascular magnetic resonance at 7 Tesla

Florian von Knobelsdorff-Brenkenhoff; Valeriy Tkachenko; Lukas Winter; Jan Rieger; Christof Thalhammer; Fabian Hezel; Andreas Graessl; Matthias A. Dieringer; Thoralf Niendorf; Jeanette Schulz-Menger

BackgroundFunctional and morphologic assessment of the right ventricle (RV) is of clinical importance. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) at 1.5T has become gold standard for RV chamber quantification and assessment of even small wall motion abnormalities, but tissue analysis is still hampered by limited spatial resolution. CMR at 7T promises increased resolution, but is technically challenging. We examined the feasibility of cine imaging at 7T to assess the RV.MethodsNine healthy volunteers underwent CMR at 7T using a 16-element TX/RX coil and acoustic cardiac gating. 1.5T served as gold standard. At 1.5T, steady-state free-precession (SSFP) cine imaging with voxel size (1.2x1.2x6) mm3 was used; at 7T, fast gradient echo (FGRE) with voxel size (1.2x1.2x6) mm3 and (1.3x1.3x4) mm3 were applied. RV dimensions (RVEDV, RVESV), RV mass (RVM) and RV function (RVEF) were quantified in transverse slices. Overall image quality, image contrast and image homogeneity were assessed in transverse and sagittal views.ResultsAll scans provided diagnostic image quality. Overall image quality and image contrast of transverse RV views were rated equally for SSFP at 1.5T and FGRE at 7T with voxel size (1.3x1.3x4)mm3. FGRE at 7T provided significantly lower image homogeneity compared to SSFP at 1.5T. RVEDV, RVESV, RVEF and RVM did not differ significantly and agreed close between SSFP at 1.5T and FGRE at 7T (p=0.5850; p=0.5462; p=0.2789; p=0.0743). FGRE at 7T with voxel size (1.3x1.3x4) mm3 tended to overestimate RV volumes compared to SSFP at 1.5T (mean difference of RVEDV 8.2±9.3ml) and to FGRE at 7T with voxel size (1.2x1.2x6) mm3 (mean difference of RVEDV 9.3±8.6ml).ConclusionsFGRE cine imaging of the RV at 7T was feasible and provided good image quality. RV dimensions and function were comparable to SSFP at 1.5T as gold standard.

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Dive into the Lukas Winter's collaboration.

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Andreas Graessl

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Jan Rieger

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Celal Oezerdem

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Christof Thalhammer

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Fabian Hezel

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Helmar Waiczies

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Till Huelnhagen

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Antje Els

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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