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Result : Searchterm 'Phase' found in 35 terms [] and 251 definitions []
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Searchterm 'Phase' was also found in the following services: 
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News  (25)  Resources  (11)  Forum  (27)  
 
Multi Phase ImagingInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
(MSMP) Multi slice multiple phases is a cardiac gated sequence with different heart phases and several slices.
(SSMP) Single slice multiple phase is a cardiac gated sequence with different heart phases in one slice.
 
Images, Movies, Sliders:
 Cardiac Infarct 4 Chamber Cine 1  Open this link in a new window
    
 
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Searchterm 'Phase' was also found in the following services: 
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Radiology  (17) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (77) Open this link in a new window
Opposed Phase ImageInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
An image in which the signal from two spectral components (such as fat and water) is 180° out of phase and leads to destructive interference in a voxel.
Since fat precesses slower than water, based on their chemical shift, their signals will decay and precess in the transverse plane at different frequencies. When the phase of the TE becomes opposed (180°), their combined signal intensities subtract with each other in the same voxel, producing a signal void or dark band at the fat/water interface of the tissues being examined.
Opposed phase gradient echo imaging for the abdomen is a lipid-type tissue sensitive sequence particularly for the liver and adrenal glands, which puts a signal intensity around abnormal water-based tissues or lesions that are fatty. Due to the increased sensitivity of opposed phase, the tissue visualization increases the lesion-to-liver contrast and exhibits more signal intensity loss in tissues containing small amounts of lipids compared to a spin echo T1 with fat suppression. Using an opposed phase gradient echo also provides the ability to differentiate various pathologies in the brain, including lipids, methaemoglobin, protein, calcifications and melanin.

See also Out of Phase, and Dixon.
 
Images, Movies, Sliders:
 MRI Liver Out Of Phase  Open this link in a new window
    
 
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• View the DATABASE results for 'Opposed Phase Image' (5).Open this link in a new window

 
Further Reading:
  News & More:
Adrenal Myelolipoma
Tuesday, 19 June 2001   by www.emedicine.com    
Iron overload: accuracy of in-phase and out-of-phase MRI as a quick method to evaluate liver iron load in haematological malignancies and chronic liver disease
Friday, 1 June 2012   by www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov    
MRI Resources 
Safety Products - Image Quality - Contrast Agents - Service and Support - MR Myelography - RIS
 
Phase Encoding Order
 
The temporal order in which the phase encoding gradient pulses are applied. The order can be sequential, centric, reverse centric, random, etc.
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News  (25)  Resources  (11)  Forum  (27)  
 
Phase Effect ArtifactInfoSheet: - Artifacts - 
Case Studies, 
Reduction Index, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Artifacts -
 
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Aliasing or wrap around artifacts
Thursday, 31 March 2011   by de.slideshare.net    
Searchterm 'Phase' was also found in the following services: 
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Radiology  (17) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (77) Open this link in a new window
Blipped Phase Encoding
 
A strategy for incrementing the position of the k-space trajectory of an echo planar imaging (EPI) pulse sequence.
Echo planar imaging (EPI) uses a constant gradient amplitude in one direction. This, combined with an oscillating gradient system in the frequency encoding direction, produces a zigzag trajectory in k-space. In the blipped phase encoding variant of EPI, the k-space position in the phase encoded direction is incremented by gradient 'blips' of the appropriate area. These, when timed to occur during the reversals of the read-out gradient, produce a rectilinear path in k-space.
The artifacts in an EPI image can arise from both hardware and sample imperfections. These are most easily understandable from examination of the k-space trajectory involved, which is either a zigzag form (when using a constant phase encoding gradient) or a rastered zigzag (when the phase encoding is performed with small gradients at the end of each scan line, so-called 'blipped' EPI).
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Chapter 2 - Principles of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
   by www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk    
MRI Resources 
Claustrophobia - MRI Technician and Technologist Schools - PACS - Brain MRI - Raman Spectroscopy - Artifacts
 
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