Magnetic Resonance - Technology Information Portal Welcome to MRI Technology
Info
  Sheets

Out-
      side
 



 
 'SCan Time' 
SEARCH FOR    
 
  2 3 5 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Result : Searchterm 'SCan Time' found in 1 term [] and 48 definitions []
previous     6 - 10 (of 49)     next
Result Pages : [1]  [2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]
Searchterm 'SCan Time' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
News  (25)  Resources  (3)  Forum  (13)  
 
Turbo Spin Echo Turbo Factor
 
(TSE TF) The turbo factor is the number of echoes acquired after each excitation. This is a measure of the scan time acceleration, e.g. at turbo factor 3 the scan time is 3 times faster as a SE sequence with comparable parameters. In combination with profile order and effective echo time the TSE turbo factor controls the echo spacing.

See also Scan Time and Echo Spacing.
spacer
 
• Related Searches:
    • Turbo Field Echo
    • Effective Echo Time
    • Spin Echo
    • Echo Sharing
    • Echo Spacing
 
Further Reading:
  News & More:
Comparison of Fast Spin-Echo Versus Conventional Spin-Echo MRI forEvaluating Meniscal Tears
June 2005   by www.ajronline.org    
MRI Resources 
Contrast Agents - Absorption and Emission - Libraries - Devices - Musculoskeletal and Joint MRI - Spectroscopy
 
Aliasing ArtifactInfoSheet: - Artifacts - 
Case Studies, 
Reduction Index, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Artifacts -
 
Quick Overview
Please note that there are different common names for this MRI artifact.
Artifact Information
NAME
Aliasing, backfolding, foldover, phase wrapping, wrap around
DESCRIPTION
Image wrap around
Aliasing is an artifact that occurs in MR images when the scanned body part is larger than field of view (FOV). As a consequence of the acquired k-space frequencies not being sampled densely enough, whereby portions of the object outside of the desired FOV get mapped to an incorrect location inside the FOV. The cyclical property of the Fourier transform fills the missing data of the right side with data from behind the FOV of the left side and vice versa. This is caused by a too small number of samples acquired in, e.g. the frequency encoding direction, therefore the spectrums will overlap, resulting in a replication of the object in the x direction.
Aliasing in the frequency direction can be eliminated by twice as fast sampling of the signal or by applying frequency specific filters to the received signal.
A similar problem occurs in the phase encoding direction, where the phases of signal-bearing tissues outside of the FOV in the y-direction are a replication of the phases that are encoded within the FOV. Phase encoding gradients are scaled for the field of view only, therefore tissues outside the FOV do not get properly phase encoded relative to their actual position and 'wraps' into the opposite side of the image.
mri safety guidance
Image Guidance
Use a larger FOV, RFOV or 3D Volume, apply presaturation pulses to the undesired tissue, adjust the position of the FOV, or select a small coil which will only receive signal from objects inside or near the coil. The number of phase encoding steps must be increased in phase direction, unfortunately resulting in longer scan times.
When this is not possible it can be corrected by oversampling the data. Aliasing is eliminated by Oversampling in frequency direction. No Phase Wrap (Foldover Suppression) options typically correct the phase encoding by doubling the field of view, doubling the number of phase encodes (to keep resolution constant) and halving the number of averages (to keep scan time constant) then discarding the additional data and processing the image within the desired field of view (but this is more time consuming).
Tissue outside this doubled area can be folded nevertheless into the image as phase wrap. In this case combine more than 2 number of excitations / number of signal averages with foldover suppression.
See also Aliasing, Foldover Suppression, Oversampling, and Artifact Reduction - Aliasing.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Aliasing Artifact' (11).Open this link in a new window

MRI Resources 
Absorption and Emission - Libraries - PACS - Used and Refurbished MRI Equipment - Lung Imaging - Claustrophobia
 
Contrast Enhanced Timing Robust Angiography
 
(CENTRA) A special form of k-space acquisition especially for contrast enhanced MRA. Longer scan times for high image resolution is possible, without a venous overlay, because the vast majority of contrast information is acquired only in the first seconds, the remaining scan time is used for resolution.
 
Images, Movies, Sliders:
 CE-MRA of the Carotid Arteries  Open this link in a new window
    
SlidersSliders Overview

 
spacer
Searchterm 'SCan Time' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
News  (25)  Resources  (3)  Forum  (13)  
 
Duty Cycle
 
Duty cycle is the time during which the gradient system can be run at maximum power. The duty cycle is based on the total time and includes the cool down phase. The duty cycle on the RF pulse during MRI is restricted based on the specific absorption rate (SAR) limit.
SAR limits restrict radio frequency heating effects. The specific absorption rate increases with field strength, radio frequency power and duty cycle, type of the transmitter coil and body size. The especially in high and ultrahigh magnetic fields, important SAR issue can be readily addressed by reducing the RF duty cycle due to longer repetition times (TR) and the use of parallel imaging techniques. A TR longer than the minimum needed provides time for the tissue to cool down, but for the cost of a longer scan time. A parallel imaging technique reduces the RF exposure and the scan time.

See also High Field MRI.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Duty Cycle' (5).Open this link in a new window

MRI Resources 
Developers - Bioinformatics - Hospitals - Quality Advice - Intraoperative MRI - Crystallography
 
Matrix Size
 
The number of data points collected in one, two or all three directions. Normally used for the 2D in plane sampling. The display matrix may be different from the acquisition matrix, although the latter determines the resolution. Measurement time may be saved by not acquiring raw data lines corresponding to high resolution. Not measured rows are filled with zeroes prior to the image calculation. A square image is the result of an interpolation in phase encoding direction. See also Zero Filling.
mri safety guidance
Image Guidance
The chosen matrix size effects scan time, resolution and SNR. Reduced measurement matrixes decrease the scan time and the resolution by increased SNR.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Matrix Size' (4).Open this link in a new window

MRI Resources 
Distributors - Sequences - Functional MRI - Cochlear Implant - Stimulator pool - Databases
 
previous      6 - 10 (of 49)     next
Result Pages : [1]  [2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]
 Random Page
 
Share This Page
FacebookTwitterLinkedIn

MR-TIP    
Community   
User
Pass
Forgot your UserID/Password ?    



New acceleration techniques will :
reduce scan times 
cause artifacts 
increase expenses 
be useful if you have a lot of experience 
doesn't do much 
never heard of 

Look
      Ups





MR-TIP.com uses cookies! By browsing MR-TIP.com, you agree to our use of cookies.

Magnetic Resonance - Technology Information Portal
Member of SoftWays' Medical Imaging Group - MR-TIP • Radiology-TIP • Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging • 
Copyright © 2003 - 2024 SoftWays. All rights reserved. [ 3 May 2024]
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising
 [last update: 2024-02-26 03:41:00]