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Result : Searchterm 'Spectra' found in 8 terms [] and 41 definitions []
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Magnetization Transfer Contrast
 
(MTC) This MRI method increases the contrast by removing a portion of the total signal in tissue. An off resonance radio frequency (RF) pulse saturates macromolecular protons to make them invisible (caused by their ultra-short T2* relaxation times). The MRI signal from semi-solid tissue like brain parenchyma is reduced, and the signal from a more fluid component like blood is retained.
E.g., saturation of broad spectral lines may produce decreases in intensity of lines not directly saturated, through exchange of magnetization between the corresponding states; more closely coupled states will show a greater resulting intensity change. Magnetization transfer techniques make demyelinated brain or spine lesions (as seen e.g. in multiple sclerosis) better visible on T2 weighted images as well as on gadolinium contrast enhanced T1 weighted images.
Off resonance makes use of a selection gradient during an off resonance MTC pulse. The gradient has a negative offset frequency on the arterial side of the imaging volume (caudally more off resonant and cranially less off resonant). The net effect of this type of pulse is that the arterial blood outside the imaging volume will retain more of its longitudinal magnetization, with more vascular signal when it enters the imaging volume. Off resonance MTC saturates the venous blood, leaving the arterial blood untouched.
On resonance has no effect on the free water pool but will saturate the bound water pool and is the difference in T2 between the pools. Special binomial pulses are transmitted causing the magnetization of the free protons to remain unchanged. The z-magnetization returns to its original value. The spins of the bound pool with a short T2 experience decay, resulting in a destroyed magnetization after the on resonance pulse.

See also Magnetization Transfer.
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    • Proton
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    • Transverse Magnetization
    • Contrast Agents
    • Net Magnetization Vector
 
Further Reading:
  News & More:
MRI of the Human Eye Using Magnetization Transfer Contrast Enhancement
   by www.iovs.org    
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Ultrasound  (29) Open this link in a new window
Multiplet
 
A pattern of multiple resonance's (spectral lines) observed when the initially single Larmor frequency of a given nucleus in a spin system is split by interactions with neighboring spins through the scalar or spin spin interaction. The magnitude of this interaction is independent of the applied magnetic field and is referred to as J, the spin spin coupling constant. The specific pattern produced depends on the number of coupled nuclei and their spin quantum numbers.
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MRI Resources 
Implant and Prosthesis - IR - Process Analysis - MRCP - - Lung Imaging
 
Opposed Phase ImageInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
An image in which the signal from two spectral components (such as fat and water) is 180° out of phase and leads to destructive interference in a voxel.
Since fat precesses slower than water, based on their chemical shift, their signals will decay and precess in the transverse plane at different frequencies. When the phase of the TE becomes opposed (180°), their combined signal intensities subtract with each other in the same voxel, producing a signal void or dark band at the fat/water interface of the tissues being examined.
Opposed phase gradient echo imaging for the abdomen is a lipid-type tissue sensitive sequence particularly for the liver and adrenal glands, which puts a signal intensity around abnormal water-based tissues or lesions that are fatty. Due to the increased sensitivity of opposed phase, the tissue visualization increases the lesion-to-liver contrast and exhibits more signal intensity loss in tissues containing small amounts of lipids compared to a spin echo T1 with fat suppression. Using an opposed phase gradient echo also provides the ability to differentiate various pathologies in the brain, including lipids, methaemoglobin, protein, calcifications and melanin.

See also Out of Phase, and Dixon.
 
Images, Movies, Sliders:
 MRI Liver Out Of Phase  Open this link in a new window
    
 
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Further Reading:
  News & More:
Adrenal Myelolipoma
Tuesday, 19 June 2001   by www.emedicine.com    
Iron overload: accuracy of in-phase and out-of-phase MRI as a quick method to evaluate liver iron load in haematological malignancies and chronic liver disease
Friday, 1 June 2012   by www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov    
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Peak
 
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Phase CorrectionInfoSheet: - Artifacts - 
Case Studies, 
Reduction Index, 
etc.
 
1.Corrective processing of the spectrum so that spectral lines at different frequencies all have the absorption-mode phase.
2.In imaging, adjustment of the signal in different parts of the image to have a consistent phase.
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MRI Resources 
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