A pacemaker is a
device for internal or external battery-operated
cardiac pacing to overcome
cardiac arrhythmias or heart block. All implanted electronic devices are susceptible to
the electromagnetic fields used in
magnetic resonance imaging.
Therefore,
the main
magnetic field,
the gradient field, and
the radio frequency (RF) field are potential hazards for
cardiac pacemaker patients.
The pacemaker's
susceptibility to static field and its critical role in life support have warranted special consideration.
The static
magnetic field applies force to magnetic materials. This force and
torque effects rise linearly with
the field strength of the MRI machines. Both, RF fields and
pulsed gradients can induce voltages in circuits or on
the pacing lead, which will heat up
the tissue around e.g.
the lead tip, with a potential risk
of thermal injury.
Regulations for pacemakers provide that
they have to switch to
the magnet mode in static magnetic fields above 1.0 mT. In
MR imaging,
the gradient and RF fields may mimic signals from
the heart with inhibition or fast pacing
of the heart. In
the magnet mode, most
of the current pacemakers will pace with a fix pulse rate because
they do not accept
the heartsignals. However,
the state
of an implanted pacemaker will be unpredictable inside a strong
magnetic field. Transcutaneous controller adjustment
of pacing rate is a feature
of many units. Some achieve this control using switches activated by
the external application
of a
magnet to open/close
the switch. O
thers use rotation
of an external
magnet to turn internal controls.
The fringe field around
the MRI magnet can activate such switches or controls. Such activations are a
safety risk.
Areas with fields higher than 0.5 mT (
5 Gauss Limit) commonly have restricted access and/or are posted as a
safety risk to persons with pacemakers.
A
Cardiac pacemaker is because
the risks, under normal circumstances an absolute
contraindication for
MRI procedures.
Never
theless, with special precaution
the risks can be lowered. Reprogramming
the pacemaker to an asynchronous mode with fix pacing rate or turning
off will reduce
the risk
of fast pacing or inhibition. Reducing
the SAR value reduces
the potential
MRI risks of heating. For
MRI scans
of the head and
the lower
extremities, tissue heating also seems to be a smaller problem. If a
transmit receive coil is used to scan
the head or
the feet,
the cardiac pacemaker is outside
the sending
coil and possible heating is very limited.