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