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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

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Title: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance


1
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
  • Phillip W Patton, Ph.D.

2
Take Away 5 Things You Should Be Able to Explain
After the NMR Lectures
  • The magnetic characteristics of the nucleus and
    the magnetic properties of matter
  • How the NMR signal is generated and detected
  • T1 and T2 relaxation how they arise and how they
    are measured
  • Pulse sequence methods used and pulse sequence
    timing (e.g., TR and TE) and inherent NMR
    parameters (e.g., T1 and T2) give rise to tissue
    contrast
  • How a 1D gradient can be used to provide an echo
    and allow for quick imaging with shallow flip
    angle sequences

3
2003 Nobel Prize for Medicine- MRI
  • Laterbur and Mansfield (2003, medicine)
    discoveries concerning magnetic resonance imaging
    (MRI)
  • Rabi (1944, physics) nuclear magnetic resonance
    (NMR) methodology
  • Bloch and Purcell (1952, physics) NMR precision
    measurements
  • Ernst (1991, chemistry) high-resolution NMR
    spectroscopy

4
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
  • NMR the study of the magnetic properties of the
    nucleus
  • Magnetic field associated with nuclear spin/chg.
    distr.
  • Not an imaging technique provides spectroscopic
    data
  • High contrast sensitivity to soft tissue
    differences
  • Does not use ionizing radiation (radio waves)
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging magnetic gradients
    and mathematical reconstruction algorithms
    produce the N-dimensional image from NMR
    free-induction decay data
  • Important to understand the underlying principles
    of NMR in order to transfer this knowledge to MRI

5
Image Contrast What does it depend on?
  • Radiation needs to interact with the bodys
    tissues in some differential manner to provide
    contrast
  • X-ray/CT differences in e- density (e-/cm3 r
    e-/g)
  • Ultrasound differences in acoustic impedance (Z
    rc)
  • Nuclear Medicine differences in tracer
    concentration (r)
  • MRI many intrinsic and extrinsic factors affect
    contrast
  • intrinsic rH,T1, T2, flow, perfusion, diffusion,
    ...
  • extrinsic TR, TE, TI, flip angle, ...

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 257.
6
Magnetism and the Magnetic Properties of Matter
  • Mag. field generated by moving charges (e- or
    quarks)
  • Most materials do not exhibit overt magnetic
    properties
  • Exception permanent magnet
  • Magnetic susceptibility extent to which a
    material becomes magnetized when placed in a
    magnetic field
  • Three categories of magnetic susceptibility
  • Diamagnetic opposing applied field
  • Ca, H2O, most organic materials (C and H)
  • Paramagnetic enhancing field, no self-magnetism
  • O2, deoxyhemoglobin and Gd-based contrast agents
  • Ferromagnetic superparamagnetic, greatly
    enhancing field
  • Exhibits self-magnetism Fe, Co and Ni

7
Magnetism and the Magnetic Properties of Matter
  • Magnetic fields arise from magnetic dipoles (N/S)
  • N side the origin of magnetic field lines
    (arbitrary)
  • Attraction (N-S) and repulsion (N-N S-S)
  • Magnetic field strength (flux density) B
  • Measured in tesla (T) and gauss (G) 1 T 10,000
    G
  • Earth magnetic field 1/20,000 T or 0.5 G
  • Magnetic fields arise from
  • Permanent magnets
  • Current through a wire or solenoid (current
    amplitude sets B magnitude)

8
Magnetism and the Magnetic Properties of Matter
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 374 and 377.
9
Magnetic Characteristics of the Nucleus
  • Magnetic properties of nuclei are determined by
    the spin and charge distribution (quarks) of the
    nucleons (p and n)
  • The magnetic moment (m) describes the nuclear B
    field magnitude
  • Pairing of p-p or n-n causes m to cancel out
  • So if the number of protons and neutrons is even
    ? no/little m
  • If N even and P odd or P even and N odd ?
    resultant m (NMR eff.)

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 375.
10
Nuclear Magnetic Characteristics of the Elements
  • Biologically relevant elements that are
    candidates for NMR/MRI
  • Magnitude of m
  • Physiologic concentration
  • Isotopic abundance
  • Relative sensitivity
  • 1H (p) provides 104-106 times the signal as 23Na
    or 31P

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 376.
11
Nuclear Magnetic Characteristics of the Elements
  • Spinning p considered classically as a bar
    magnet
  • Thermal energy randomizes direction of m ? no net
    magnetization
  • Application of an external magnetic field (B0) ?
    two energy states
  • Lower energy m parallel w/ B0 and higher energy m
    anti-parallel w/ B0
  • Number of excess m _at_ 1.0T and 310 K ? 3 ppm
    (very small effect)
  • For typical voxel in MRI 1021 p ? 3x1015 more m
    in lower state

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 377.
c.f. http//www.hull.ac.uk/mri /lectures/gpl_page
.html
12
Larmor Frequency
  • Classically a torque on m by B0 causes
    precession
  • Precession occurs at an angular frequency
    (rotations/sec or radians/sec)
  • Larmor equation w0(radians/sec) gB0
    f0(rotations/sec or Hz) (g/2p)B0
  • g/2p gyromagnetic ratio (MHz/T) unique to each
    element
  • Choice of freq. ? the resonance phen. to be
    tuned to a specific element
  • For 1H _at_ 1.5T 64 MHz (Channel 3)

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 379.
c.f. Hendee, et al. Medical Imaging Physics, 4th
ed., p. 357.
13
Larmor Frequency US VHF Broadcast Spectrum
c.f. http//www.rentcom.com/wpapers/ telex/telex3.
html
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p.18.
14
Nuclear Magnetic Characteristics of the Elements
  • At equilibrium, no B field ? B0 (all along
    z-axis) Random distribution of m in x-y plane
    averages out Bxy 0 Small mz add up to
    measurable M0 (equilibrium magnetization)
    Absorbed radiofrequency EM radiation ? low-E to
    high-E High-E nuclei lose energy to environment
    return to equilibrium state and Mz (longitudinal
    magnetization) ? M0

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 378.
c.f. http//www.hull.ac.uk/mri /lectures/gpl_page
.html
15
Geometric Orientation
  • Two frames of reference used
  • Laboratory frame stationary reference from
    observers POV
  • Rotating frame angular frequency equal to the
    Larmor precessional frequency
  • Both frames are useful in explaining various
    interactions
  • Mxy transverse magnetization, ? B0 (at
    equilibrium 0)
  • When RF applied, Mz tipped into the x-y
    (transverse) plane

Rotating Frame
Lab Frame
Rotating Frame
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., pp. 380-381.
16
Resonance and Excitation
  • Return to equilibrium results in RF emission from
    m with
  • Amplitude proportional the number of excited
    nuclei (spin r)
  • Rate depends on the characteristics of the sample
    (T1 and T2)
  • Excitation, detection analysis the basics for
    NMR/MRI
  • Resonance occurs when applied RF magnetic field
    (B1) is precisely matched in frequency to that of
    the nuclei
  • Absorption of RF energy promotes low-E m ? high-E
    m
  • Amplitude and duration of RF pulse determines the
    number of nuclei that undergo the energy
    transition (q)
  • Continued RF application induces a return to
    equilibrium

17
Resonance and Excitation
RF Pulse Angle Tip 0 90 180
Higher energy state
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 382.
18
Resonance and Excitation
  • B1 field component rotating at Larmor f0
    (off-freq. ? little effect)
  • Rotating reference frame B1 stationary in x-y
    plane
  • B1 applied torque to Mz ? rotation q g B1 t
  • Common angles 90 (p/2 radians p/2 pulse) and
    180 (p radians)
  • Flip angle (q) describes the rotation through
    which the longitudinal magnetization (Mz) is
    displaced to generate transverse magnetization
    (Mxy)

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 384.
19
Resonance and Excitation
  • Time required 10-100 msec
  • 90 pulse ? largest Mxy (signal) generated
  • For flip angle (q) lt 90
  • smaller Mxy component generated and less signal
  • less time necessary to displace Mz
  • greater amount of Mxy (signal) per excitation
    time
  • Low flip angle (q) very important in rapid MRI
    scanning

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 384.
20
Free Induction Decay T2 and T2 Relaxation
  • 90 pulse produces phase coherence of nuclei
  • As Mxy rotates at f0 of the receiver coil (lab
    frame) through magnetic induction (dB/dt)
    produces a damped sinusoidal electronic signal
    free induction decay (FID)

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 385.
21
Free Induction Decay T2 and T2 Relaxation
  • Decay of the FID envelope due to loss of phase
    coherence of the individual spins due to
    intrinsic micro magnetic field variations in the
    sample spin-spin interaction ? T2 decay constant
  • Mxy(t) M0e-(t/T2) decay of Mxy after 90 pulse
  • T2 time required for Mxy to ? to 37 (1/e) peak
    level
  • T2 relaxation relatively unaffected by B0

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 385.
22
Free Induction Decay T2 and T2 Relaxation
  • T2 decay mechanisms det. by the molecular
    structure of the sample
  • Large, stationary structures have short T2
  • B0 inhomogeneities and susceptibility agents
    (e.g., contrast materials) cause more rapid
    dephasing ? T2 decay
  • Mobile molecules (e.g., CSF) exhibit a long T2 as
    rapid molecular motion reduces intrinsic B
    inhomogeneities

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 386.
c.f. http//www.hull.ac.uk/mri /lectures/gpl_page
.html
23
Return to Equilibrium T1 Relaxation
  • Loss of Mxy phase coherence (T2 T2 decay)
    occurs relatively quickly
  • Return of Mz to M0 (equilibrium) takes longer
  • Excited spins release energy to local environment
    (lattice) spin-lattice relaxation ? T1 decay
    constant
  • Mz(t) M01-e-(t/T1) recovery of Mz after 90
    pulse
  • T1 time required for Mz to ? to 63 (1-e-1) M0
  • After t 5 T1 ? Mz(t) ? M0

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 387.
c.f. http//www.hull.ac.uk/mri /lectures/gpl_page
.html
24
Return to Equilibrium T1 Relaxation
  • Method to determine T1 use various Dt between
    90 pulses and estimate by curve fitting
    Dissipation of absorbed energy into the lattice
    (T1) varies substantially for various tissue
    structures and pathologies (prev. Damadian table)
    Energy transfer most efficient when the
    precessional frequency of the excited nuclei
    overlaps with the vibrational frequencies of the
    lattice

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 388.
25
Return to Equilibrium T1 Relaxation
  • Large slow-moving molecules ? low vibrational
    freq. (very small overlap with f0 longest T1)
  • Moderately sized molecules (e.g., lipids,
    proteins and fat) and viscous fluids ? low
    intermed. freq. (great overlap short T1)
  • Small molecules ? low, intermediate and high
    freq. (small overlap with f0 long T1)
  • T1 Soft tissue 0.1,1 and aqueous substances
    1,4
  • T1 relaxation ? as B0 ?
  • Contrast agents spin-lattice sink

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 389.
26
Comparison of T1 T2
  • T1 gt T2 gt T2 (T2 4-10X shorter than T1) Small
    molecules long T1 and long T2 (e.g., water, CSF)
    Intermediate molecules short T1 and short T2
    (most tissues) Large/bound molecules long T1 and
    short T2 The differences in T1 and T2, as well as
    spin density (r) provide much to MRI contrast and
    exploited for the diagnosis of pathologic
    conditions

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., pp. 390-391.
27
T1 T2 vs. B Field Strength
1.5 T 64 MHz
3.0 T 128 MHz
c.f. Mansfield, et al. NMR Imaging in
Biomedicine, 1982, p. 23
28
Pulse Sequences
  • Tailoring pulse sequence emphasizes the image
    contrast dependent on r, T1 and T2 ? contrast
    weighted images
  • Timing, order, polarity, pulse shaping, and
    repetition frequency of RF pulses and gradient
    (later) application
  • Three major pulse sequences
  • Spin echo
  • Inversion recovery
  • Gradient recalled echo

c.f. http//www.indianembassy.org/dydemo/page3.htm
29
Spin Echo - Echo Time (TE)
  • Initial 90 pulse (t 0) ? maximal Mxy and phase
    coherence
  • FID exponentially decays via T2 relaxation
  • At t TE/2 a 180 pulse is applied ? induces
    spin rephasing
  • Spin inversion spins rotate in the opposite
    direction, undoing all the T2 dephasing through
    Dt TE/2 at t TE (Dt 2TE/2)
  • An FID waveform echo (spin echo) produced at t
    TE

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 392.
30
Spin Echo - Echo Time (TE)
  • Maximum echo amplitude depends on T2 and not T2
  • FID envelope decay still dependent on T2
  • SE formation separates RF excitation and signal
    acquisition events
  • FID echo envelope centered at TE sampled and
    digitized with ADC
  • Multiple echos generated by successive 180
    pulses allow determination of sample T2 -
    exponential curve fitting Mxy(t) ? e-t/T2

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 393.
31
SE - Repetition Time (TR) Partial Saturation
  • Standard SE pulse sequences use a series of 90
    pulses separated by Dt TR (repetition time,
    msec) 300,3000
  • This Dt allows recovery of Mz through T1
    relaxation processes
  • Degree of partial saturation dependent on T1
    relaxation and TR
  • After the 2nd 90 pulse, a steady-state Mz
    produces the same FID amplitude from subsequent
    90 pulses partial saturation

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 394.
32
Spin Echo Contrast Weighting
  • How the NMR signal changes with different tissue
    types and pulse sequence parameters
  • S ??? 1-e-(TR/T1) e-(TE/T2)
  • r, T1 and T2 are tissue properties
  • TR and TE are pulse sequence parameters
  • Each of these values can alter voxel contrast

(x,y)
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 394.
33
Spin Echo T1-weighting
  • Short TR to maximize differences in Mz during
    return to equilibrium
  • Short TE to minimize differences in T2 dependency
    of the FID
  • How T1 values modulate the FID
  • When TR ranges 400-600 msec differences in Mz
    emphasized
  • Short TE preserves the T1 FID differences with
    minimum T2 decay

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 395.
34
Spin Echo T1-weighting
(TR549, TE11)
  • T1-weighted (TR500, TE8)
  • Fat most intense signal
  • White and gray matter with intermediate signal
  • CSF with lowest signal
  • Typical pulse sequence parameters
  • TR 400-600 msec
  • TE 5-30 msec

T1
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 395.
35
NMR T1 for Tumor and Normal Tissue
c.f. http//www.gg.caltech.edu/dhl/
c.f. Mansfield, et al. NMR Imaging in
Biomedicine, 1982, p. 22.
36
Spin Echo Spin (Proton) Density Weighting
  • Image contrast due to differences in the nuclear
    spin density (r)
  • Very hydrogenous tissues (e.g., lipids and fats)
    have high r compared with proteinaceous soft
    tissues
  • Aqueous tissues (e.g., CSF) also have a
    relatively high r
  • Long TR to minimize T1 differences (CSF gt fat gt
    GM gt WM)
  • Short TE to minimize T2 decay

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 397.
37
Spin Echo Spin (Proton) Density Weighting
(TR2400, TE30)
  • r-weighted (TR2,400, TE30)
  • Fat and CSF relatively bright
  • Slight contrast inversion between WM and GM
  • Typical pulse sequence parameters
  • TR 1,500-3,500 msec
  • TE 5-30 msec
  • Highest SNR for SE pulse sequences
  • Image contrast relatively poor

r
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 397.
T1
38
Spin Echo T2-weighting
  • Reduce T1 effects with long TR, accentuate T2
    effects with long TE
  • T2-weighted signal usu. the second echo of a
    multi-echo sequence
  • Compared with a T1-weighted image ? inversion of
    tissue contrast
  • Short T1 tissues ? short T2, long T1 tissues ?
    long T2

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 398.
39
Spin Echo T2-weighting
(TR2400, TE90)
  • T2-weighted (TR gt 2,000, TE gt 80)
  • As TE increased, more T2 contrast is achieved at
    the expense of reduced Mxy
  • Typical pulse sequence parameters
  • TR 1,500-3,500 msec
  • TE 60-150 msec

T2
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 398.
r
T1
40
Spin Echo Parameters
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 399.
41
Inversion Recovery (IR)
  • Emphasizes T1 by expanding the amplitude of Mz by
    2X
  • Initial 180 pulse inverts Mz ? - Mz
  • After Dt TI (inversion time), a 90 pulse
    rotates Mz into Mxy
  • At Dt TI TE/2, a second 180 pulse induces an
    FID echo at TE
  • TR period between initial 180 pulses
  • TR lt 5 T1 causes partial saturation

(x,y)
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 400.
42
Inversion Recovery (IR)
  • Echo amplitude depends on TI, TE, TR and Mz
  • S ??? 1-2e-(TI/T1)e-(TR/T1) e-(TE/T2)
  • TI controls contrast between tissues
  • Can produce negative Mz (out of phase) when short
    TI used
  • FID amplitude phase (phase sensitive detection
    quadrature receiver coil) can be preserved or the
    magnitude taken

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 400.
43
IR - T2 Short Tau IR
  • Short Tau Inversion Recovery (STIR)
  • Uses very short TI and magnitude signal
    processing
  • Materials w/ short T1 have lower sig. intensity
    (reverse of std. T1-weighting)
  • All tissues pass through zero amplitude (Mz 0)
  • Judicious TI selection ? suppress a given tissue
    signal (bounce point)

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 402.
44
IR - T2 Short Tau IR
(TR750, TE13)
  • Null point TI ln(2) T1

(TI150, TR5520, TE29)
  • Example fat suppression T1 260 msec (B01.5T)
    ? TI 180 msec
  • Compared with a T1-weighted sequence, STIR fat
    suppression reduces distracting fat signal and
    eliminates chemical shift artifacts
  • Typical STIR TI 140-180 msec TR 2,500 msec

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 402.
FLAIR
T2
(TI2400 TR10K, TE150)
(TR2400, TE90)
45
IR - Field Attenuated IR and Contrast Comparison
  • Long TI increases the signal levels of CSF
    other long T1 tissues
  • FLuid Attenuated IR (FLAIR) bounce point at CSF
    T1 (3,500 msec)
  • Nulling CSF requires TI ln(2) T1 2,400
    msec
  • TR 7,000 typically employed to allow reasonable
    Mz recovery
  • Contrast comparison T1-, r-, and T2-weighted
    plus FLAIR

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 403.
46
Gradient Recalled Echo (GRE)
  • Magnetic field gradient used to induce the
    formation of an echo
  • Gradient changes local magnetic field (B0DB) f
    (g/2p)(B0DB)
  • FID signal generated under a linear gradient
    dephases quickly
  • Inverted gradient (opposite polarity) used to
    produce an FID echo
  • Not a spin-echo technique does not cancel T2
    effects

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 404.
47
Gradient Recalled Echo (GRE)
  • Echo time controlled through gradient magnitude
    or time offset
  • Flip angle (q) a major variable determining
    contrast in GRE seq.
  • Less time to excite the spins ? short TR ?
    smaller flip q
  • For short TR (lt 200 msec) more Mz generated w/
    small flip q

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 404.
48
GRE Sequence with Long TR (gt 200 msec)
  • For long TR (gt 200 msec) GRE and flip q gt 45
    contrast behavior similar to SE
  • Major difference signal dependence on T2 rather
    than T2
  • Mechanisms of T2 contrast different than T2,
    especially for contrast agents
  • T1-weighting achieved with short TE
  • For flip q lt 30 small Mxy reduces T1
    differences
  • r differences the major contrast attributes for
    short TE
  • Longer TE provides T2-weighting
  • GRE not useful with long TR except for
    demonstrating magnetic susceptibility differences

49
GRE - Steady-state Precession withShort TR (lt 50
msec)
  • Steady-state precession equilibrium of Mz and
    Mxy from pulse to pulse in a repitition sequence
  • For very short TR (lt T2), persistent Mxy occurs
  • During each pulse aMxy ? Mz and bMz ? Mxy (a, b
    lt1)
  • Steady-state Mz and Mxy components co-exist in
    dynamic equilibrium
  • GRASS Gradient Recalled Acq. in the Steady
    State
  • FISP Fast Imaging with Steady-state Precession
  • FAST Fourier Acquired STeady state
  • Practical only with short and very short TR
  • Flip q has the major impact on contrast

50
GRE - Steady-state Precession withShort TR (lt 50
msec) and Contrast Weighting
  • Small flip q 5-30 r-weighted contrast
    Moderate flip q 30-60 T2/T1-weighted contrast
    (some T1) Large flip q 75-90 T2- and
    T1-weighted contrast Typical parameter values for
    contrast desired in GRE and steady-state
    acquisitions GRASS/FISP TR 35 msec, TE 3 msec
    and flip q 20
  • Unremarkable contrast but flow

GRASS sequence (TR 24 msec, TE 4.7 msec, flip
q50) volume acquisition. Contrast unremarkable
for white/gray matter due to T2/T1-weighting
dependence. Blood appears bright MR angiography
reduce contrast of anatomy relative to
vasculature.
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., pp. 406-407.
51
Signal Flow
  • The MR signal from moving fluids (vascular and
    CSF) is complicated by many factors
  • Flow velocity
  • Vessel orientation
  • Laminar vs. turbulent flow patterns
  • Pulse sequences
  • Image acquisition modes
  • Flow related mechanisms combine with image
    acquisition parameters to alter contrast
  • Bright-blood to black-blood
  • Can be a source of artifacts
  • Exploited to produce MR angiography images

52
Signal Flow
  • Low signal intensities high-velocity signal loss
  • Nuclei move out of slice during echo reformation
    (nothing focused in Mxy plane ? no or little FID
    signal)
  • Flow turbulence flow voids
  • Dephasing of spins in blood (confused spin
    alignment)
  • Black-blood double IR (TI 600 ms)
  • IR sequence prefaced with non-selective, volume
    180 pulse
  • Flow-related enhancement
  • Even-echo rephasing (prominent in slow laminar
    flow veins)
  • Gradient echo images (unsaturated blood) ?
    velocity, slice thinness and TR

53
Perfusion and Diffusion Contrast
  • Tissues with ? H2O mobility have greater signal
    loss
  • In vivo structural integrity of tissues measured
    ? apparent diffusion coefficient maps
  • Sensitive indicator for early detection of
  • Spine and spinal cord pathophysiology
  • Ischemic injury
  • Spin-echo and echoplanar pulse sequences with
    diffusion gradients
  • Obstacles
  • Sensitivity to head/brain motion
  • Eddy currents

Diffusion-weighted image (DWI) with gray
scale-encoded diffusion coefficients.
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 410.
54
Magnetization Transfer Contrast
  • Result of selective observation of the
    interaction between the p in free H2O molecules
    and p in macromolecular proteins due to coupling
    or chemical exchange
  • Can be excited separately using narrow-band RF
  • Magnetization transferred from macromolecular p
    to free H2O p
  • Reduced signal from adjacent free H2O p

c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 412.
55
Magnetization Transfer Contrast
  • This process affects only those p having
    chemical exchange with the macromolecules and
    improves image contrast
  • Anatomic imaging of heart, eye, MS, knee
    cartilage and general MR angiography
  • Tissue characterization possible as the
    magnetization transfer ratio (MTCon/MTCoff) is
    caused in part by tissue-specific surface
    chemistry

MR arthrograms of shoulder in 32-year-old man
with suspected gleno-humeral instability. Axial
3D gradient-echo MR image obtained using
parametric magnetization transfer pulses no
discernible magnetization transfer contrast in
injected fluid or in fatty marrow spaces, whereas
degree of magnetization transfer contrast varies
in skeletal muscle, cartilage, and capsular
supporting structures (color scale 0-100).
c.f. Yao L, Thomasson D. Magnetization transfer
contrast in rapid three-dimensional MR imaging
using segmented radiofrequency prepulses. AJR
2002 179 863-5 .
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