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Result : Searchterm 'Cardiac Triggering' found in 1 term [] and 4 definitions [], (+ 2 Boolean[] results
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Quick Overview
NAME
Cerebro spinal fluid pulsation
Pulsatile cerebro spinal fluid flow produces ghost artifacts that are superimposed in the image.
Image Guidance
| | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Cerebro Spinal Fluid Pulsation Artifact' (3).
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This method synchronize the heartbeat with the beginning of the TR, whereat the r wave is used as the trigger. Cardiac gating times the acquisition of MR data to physiological motion in order to minimize motion artifacts. ECG gating techniques are useful whenever data acquisition is too slow to occur during a short fraction of the cardiac cycle.
Image blurring due to cardiac-induced motion occurs for imaging times of above approximately 50 ms in systole, while for imaging during diastole the critical time is of the order of 200-300 ms. The acquisition of an entire image in this time is only possible with using ultrafast MR imaging techniques. If a series of images using cardiac gating or real-time echo planar imaging EPI are acquired over the entire cardiac cycle, pixel-wise velocity and vascular flow can be obtained.
In simple cardiac gating, a single image line is acquired in each cardiac cycle. Lines for multiple images can then be acquired successively in consecutive gate intervals. By using the standard multiple slice imaging and a spin echo pulse sequence, a number of slices at different anatomical levels is obtained. The repetition time (TR) during a ECG-gated acquisition equals the RR interval, and the RR interval defines the minimum possible repetition time (TR). If longer TRs are required, multiple integers of the RR interval can be selected. When using a gradient echo pulse sequence, multiple phases of a single anatomical level or multiple slices at different anatomical levels can be acquired over the cardiac cycle.
Also called cardiac triggering. | | | | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Cardiac Gating' (15).
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Quick Overview Please note that there are different common names for this artifact.
REASON
Movement of body fluids
Flow effects in MRI produce a range of artifacts, e.g. intravascular signal void by time of flight effects; turbulent dephasing and first echo dephasing, caused by flowing blood.
Through movement of the hydrogen nuclei (e.g. blood flow), there is a location change between the time these nuclei experience a radio frequency pulse and the time the emitted signal is received (because the repetition time is asynchronous with the pulsatile flow).
The blood flow occasionally produces intravascular high signal intensities due to flow related enhancement, even echo rephasing and diastolic pseudogating. The pulsatile laminar flow within vessels often produces a complex multilayered band that usually propagates outside the head in the phase encoded direction. Blood flow artifacts should be considered as a special subgroup of motion artifacts.
Image Guidance
| | | | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Flow Artifact' (6).
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Quick Overview
REASON
Motion, heartbeat, respiration
HELP
Triggering, breath hold, pharmaceuticals to reduce bowel motion
Ghosting artifacts are in the most cases caused by movements (e.g., respiratory motion, bowel motion, arterial pulsations, swallowing, and heartbeat) and appear in the phase encoding direction.
Image Guidance
| | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Ghosting Artifact' (5).
| | | | Further Reading: | Basics:
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