A probe instrument using room-temperature sensor(s) that can measure variations
in magnetic susceptibilities. The instrument has sufficient resolution to monitor
paramagnetic materials in a human body, such as iron in a human liver, by noninvasively
examining patients with iron-overload diseases. The instrument includes room temperature
magnetic sensors, and detects the sample, that is, the tissue response to an alternating
current field applied by an applied field coil. The applied field coil dimensions
are chosen so that the applied field is optimized for maximum response from the
liver while minimizing the effects due to the overlying abdominal tissue and at
the same time not unduly increasing the sensitivity of the instrument to the lung.
To overcome variations in the sensor output due to fluctuations in the applied
field, change in the ambient temperature and mechanical relaxation of the instrument,
the sensor-sample distance is modulated. The detector assembly is oscillated while
the examined patient remains stationary. An improved water-bag technique is employed
to eliminate background tissue response. The detector assembly forms part of a
probe instrument for performing noninvasively the paramagnetic concentration of
a patient.