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Volume Selective Excitation
 
The selective excitation of spins in only a limited region of space. This can be particularly useful for spectroscopy as well as imaging. Spatial localization of the signal source may be achieved through spatially selective excitation and the resulting signal may be analyzed directly for the spectrum corresponding to the excited region. It is usually achieved with selective excitation.
Typically, a single dimension of localization can be achieved with one selective RF excitation pulse (and a magnetic field gradient along a desired direction), while a localized volume (3D) can be excited with a stimulated echo produced with three selective RF pulses whose selective magnetic field gradients are mutually orthogonal, having a common intersection in the desired region. Similar 'crossed plane' excitation can be used with selective 180° refocusing pulses and conventional spin echoes.
A degree of spatial localization of excitation can alternatively be achieved with depth pulses, e.g. when using surface coils for excitation as well as signal detection. An indirect application of selective excitation for volume-selected spectroscopy is to use appropriate combinations of signals acquired after selective inversion of different regions, in order to subtract away the signal from undesired regions.
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Field EchoInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
(FE) Echo produced by reversing the direction of the magnetic field gradient to cancel out the position-dependent phase shifts that have accumulated due to the gradient.

See also Gradient Echo Sequence.
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Field Gradient
 
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Further Reading:
  News & More:
Active Noise Control of Magnetic Resonance Imaging Scanner Using Inverse Modeling Technique
Monday, 19 April 2010   by www.acoustics.org    
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Flow Effects
 
Motion of material being imaged, particularly flowing blood, can result in many possible effects in the images.
Fast moving blood produces flow voids, blood flowing in to the outer slices of an imaging volume produces high signals (flow related enhancement, entry slice phenomenon), pulsatile flow creates ghost images of the vessel extending across the image in the phase encoding direction (image misregistration).
Flow-related dephasing occurring when spin isochromats are moving with different velocities in an external gradient field G so that they acquire different phases. When these phases vary by more then 180° within a voxel, substantial spin dephasing results leading to considerable intravascular signal loss.
These effects can be understood as caused by time of flight effects (washout or washin due to motion of nuclei between two consecutive spatially selective RF excitations, repeated in times on the order of, or shorter than the relaxation times of blood) or phase shifts (delay between phase encoding and frequency encoding) that can be acquired by excited spins moving along magnetic field gradients.
The inconsistency of the signal resulting from pulsatile flow can lead to artifacts in the image. The flow effects can also be exploited for MR angiography or flow measurements.

See also Flow Artifact.
 
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Further Reading:
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Magnetic resonance flow velocity and temperature mapping of a shape memory polymer foam device
Thursday, 31 December 2009   by 7thspace.com    
MRI measure of blood flow over atherosclerotic plaque may detect dangerous plaque
Friday, 5 April 2013   by www.sciencecodex.com    
MRI Resources 
Raman Spectroscopy - Artifacts - Cardiovascular Imaging - Resources - Spectroscopy - Contrast Enhanced MRI
 
Fourier Transformation Imaging
 
MR imaging techniques in which at least one dimension is phase encoded by applying variable gradient pulses along that dimension before reading out the MR signal with a magnetic field gradient perpendicular to the variable gradient. The Fourier transformation is then used to reconstruct an image from the set of encoded MR signals. An imaging technique of this type is spin warp imaging.

See also Spin Warp Imaging.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Fourier Transforms and 2-D Image Processing
   by robotics.eecs.berkeley.edu    
  News & More:
Fourier Transform Imaging of Spin Vortex Eigenmodes
Friday, 13 August 2004   by www.physik.uni-regensburg.de    
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MRI is trending to low field magnets :
reduced costs will lead to this change 
AI will close the gap to high field 
only in remote areas 
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