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New acceleration techniques will :
reduce scan times 
cause artifacts 
increase expenses 
be useful if you have a lot of experience 
doesn't do much 
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MRI Forum
'Acquisition Matrix'
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Steven Ford

Tue. 5 Aug.14,
19:57

[Reply (3 of 4) to:
'MRI artifact'
started by: 'Daniel Cronk'
on Mon. 16 Jun.14]


 
  Category: 
Artifacts

 
MRI artifact
No it is not an RF leak artifact. That would appear different. I would guess that there was one instance of motion. Note that the artifact is mostly on the high contrast areas (white against black) where the patient can move the most.

Also it may be that your acquisition matrix was a little on the low side, which would lead to larger pixel-y appearance that is more apparent when there's motion.
 
 

Steven Ford
Professional Imaging Services, Inc.
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Steven Ford

Thu. 17 Mar.11,
03:16

[Reply (2 of 5) to:
'Building 3d Volumes from MRI DICOM'
started by: 'Robert Patten'
on Thu. 3 Mar.11]


 
  Category: 
General

 
Building 3d Volumes from MRI DICOM
In almost all cases, MRI images have a slice thickness far greater than their in-plane resolution, making multiplanar reconstruction meaningless. Also, most MRI images have a gap between the slices, which also renders multiplanar meaningless and impossible (unless you're happy with black bars where the slice gaps exist).

You can look at your images and the slice thickness is on the graphics. the slice gap is usually not displayed, but if you look at the slice location displayed on adjacent slices, and compare to the slice thickness, you can easily compute the slice gap.

The in-place resolution is (approx) the field of view divided by the acquisition matrix, both of which are also printed on the image somewhere.

By the way, if you have the dicom (.dcm) files, there is lots of data that's 'hidden' that you can access with a full featured dicom file editor.
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