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Original Article

Magnetic susceptibility mapping of the human thorax using a SQUID Biomagnetometer

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Pages 127-133 | Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Biomagnetism is essentially the study of the weak magnetic fields generated by biological organisms, in particular the human body. The human thorax is composed of a variety of tissues and organs of slightly different magnetic susceptibility. In an applied magnetic field (of the order of milliTeslas) these small differences in susceptibility lead to measurable field variations (of the order of nanoTeslas) at the body surface which may be of diagnostic value. Physiological processes such as cardiac activity, cardiac output, bloodflow and respiratory related lung volume changes also contribute to the observed signal. In this study susceptibility ‘maps’ were obtained by measuring the magnetic field at several hundred points over the thorax. Results indicate that magnetic susceptibility mapping produces low-resolution images of internal body structures from which is should be possible to detect pathologies that cause alterations in tissue susceptibility.

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