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Gd-DTPA Labeled DextranInfoSheet: - Contrast Agents - 
Intro, Overview, 
Characteristics, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
Short name:(Gd-DTPA)n-dextran, central moiety: Gd2+
Gd-DTPA labeled dextran is a substance that has been tested as a blood pool agent (intravascular MRI contrast agent). Dextran is a polysaccharide and has labeled with 15 Gd-DTPA moieties a higher T1 relaxivity than unbound Gd-DTPA, compared with a high safety level.

See also Intravascular Contrast Agents, Blood Pool Agents.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Evaluation of Gd-DTPA-labeled dextran as an intravascular MR contrast agent: imaging characteristics in normal rat tissues
   by radiology.rsnajnls.org    
MRI Resources 
IR - MRI Technician and Technologist Career - MRA - Hospitals - Spine MRI - Claustrophobia
 
Phase Contrast SequenceMRI Resource Directory:
 - Sequences -
 
(PC) Phase contrast sequences are the basis of MRA techniques utilizing the change in the phase shifts of the flowing protons in the region of interest to create an image. Spins that are moving along the direction of a magnetic field gradient receive a phase shift proportional to their velocity.
In a phase contrast sequence two data sets with a different amount of flow sensitivity are acquired. This is usually accomplished by applying gradient pairs, which sequentially dephase and then rephase spins during the sequence. Both 2D and 3D acquisition techniques can be applied with phase contrast MRA.
The first data set is acquired with a flow compensated sequence, i. e. without flow sensitivity. The second data set is acquired with a flow sensitive sequence. The amount of flow sensitivity is controlled by the strength of the bipolar gradient pulse pair, which is incorporated into the sequence. Stationary tissue undergoes no effective phase change after the application of the two gradients. Caused by the different spatial localization of flowing blood to stationary tissue, it experiences a different size of the second bipolar gradient compared to the first. The result is a phase shift.
The raw data from the two data sets are subtracted. By comparing the phase of signals from each location in the two sequences the exact amount of motion induced phase change can be determined to have a map where pixel brightness is proportional to spatial velocity.
Phase contrast images represent the signal intensity of the velocity of spins at each point within the field of view. Regions that are stationary remain black while moving regions are represented as grey to white.
The phase shift is proportional to the spin's velocity, and this allows the quantitative assessment of flow velocities. The difference MRI signal has a maximum value for opposite directions. This velocity is typically referred to as venc, and depends on the pulse amplitude and distance between the gradient pulse pair. For velocities larger than venc the difference signal is decreased constantly until it gets zero. Therefore, in a phase contrast angiography it is important to correctly set the venc of the sequence to the maximum flow velocity which is expected during the measurement. High venc factors of the PC angiogram (more than 40 cm/sec) will selectively image the arteries (PCA - arteriography), whereas a venc factor of 20 cm/sec will perform the veins and sinuses (PCV or MRV - venography).

See also Flow Quantification, Contrast Enhanced MR Venography, Time of Flight Angiography, Time Resolved Imaging of Contrast Kinetics.
 
Images, Movies, Sliders:
 PCA-MRA 3D Brain Venography Colored MIP  Open this link in a new window
    

 
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• View the DATABASE results for 'Phase Contrast Sequence' (5).Open this link in a new window

 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
MR–ANGIOGRAPHY(.pdf)
MRI Resources 
Knee MRI - PACS - Movies - Musculoskeletal and Joint MRI - Breast MRI - Spine MRI
 
Read Conjugate SymmetryInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
This function is similar to partial averaging in that the complex conjugate relationship between the both halves of k-space is used to shorten the echo time in an imaging sequence.

See Partial Echo.
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Trigonometric Functions
 
Trigonometric functions are mathematical functions of an angle. There are six basic trigonometric functions (Sine (sin), Cosine (cos), Tangent (tan), Cotangent (cot), Secant (sec), Cosecant (cosec)), commonly defined as ratios of two sides of a right triangle. Used in MRI for Cartesian sampling, to describe radio frequency signals, etc.
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MRI Resources 
Devices - Education - Intraoperative MRI - Breast MRI - Pediatric and Fetal MRI - Movies
 
Double Contrast SequenceInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
This sequence type is a TSE counterpart to double echo sequences. To keep the echo train as short as possible, only echoes for PD and T2 weighted images, where the phase encoding gradient has a small amplitude, are measured separately. The echoes that determine resolution are used in both raw data matrices. This reduces the number of echoes required. Also the SAR drops and more slices can be acquired in the same repetition time.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF MR IMAGING
   by spinwarp.ucsd.edu    
MRI Resources 
Corporations - Education pool - Shoulder MRI - Intraoperative MRI - Breast Implant - Implant and Prosthesis pool
 
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