Principles Of Magnetic Resonance Imaging

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Contents

Introduction

  • the interval between radiofrequency pulses ( TR)
  • the time between the radiofrequency pulse & the signal reception ( TE)
  • T1 & T2 relaxation times:
  • The rate of relaxation of the excited proton spin states is the relaxation rate. The relaxation rate is different for different tissues & for pathologic vs normal tissue. Two relaxation rates T1 & T2 are measurable in human tissue.
  • T1 images:
  • The T1 relaxation time is the lifetime {63% or (1-1/e*) decay} of protons in the excited spin state. T1-weighted images are produced by keeping the TR & TE relatively short.
  • high-intensity T1 signal
  • T2 images:
  • The T2 relaxation time is the lifetime of proton spin states becoming dephased owing to interactions among neighboring protons. T2 images are produced by using longer TR & TE times.
  • high-intensity T2 signal
  • water
  • CSF
  • edema
    *the number e is the basis of the natural logarythm (ln) ~ 2.3
  • relatively greater delivery of contrast to areas of increased vascularity produce an increase in T1-weighted signal over baseline

More General Terms

Additional Terms

References

  1. Introduction to Clinical Imaging, Radiology Syllabus, UCSF, 1993
  2. Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 11, American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 1998
  3. Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 14th ed. Fauci et al (eds), McGraw-Hill Inc. NY, 1998, pg 2289
  4. UpToDate 14.1 [1]

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