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MRI Forum
'Shimming'
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Thu. 1 Oct.09,
02:08

[Start of:
'RF shimming'
1 Reply]


 
  Category: 
Basics and Physics

 
RF shimming
What is RF shimming? Is it available in a clinical scanner?
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Giorgos Menikou

Sat. 27 May.06,
07:16

[Start of:
'GE Signa Excite 1.5 T HD spectroscopy fine shimming'
0 Reply]


 
  Category: 
Spectroscopy

 
GE Signa Excite 1.5 T HD spectroscopy fine shimming
Can anyone please give directions for how to use the SpectroScan Tool in spectroscopic sequences.
It is necessary to optimise the shimming in spectroscopy in order to get well defined sharp peaks in the metabolites spectrum.
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katharine cummings

Thu. 18 Oct.07,
12:07

[Start of:
'Manual Shimming -Picker Polaris'
0 Reply]


 
  Category: 
Devices, Scanner, Machines

 
Manual Shimming -Picker Polaris
I have been trying to manual shim for fat-saturation sequences. Can someone give me some advise. Thank You
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Renate Semrau

Mon. 28 Aug.23,
07:23

[Reply (1 of 2) to:
'Improving MEDIC/MERGE/M-ffe and GRE/FFE image quality'
started by: 'Dan Lopez'
on Sun. 27 Aug.23]


 
  Category: 
Sequences and Imaging Parameters

 
Improving MEDIC/MERGE/M-ffe and GRE/FFE image quality
Hi,
Sequences with multiple echoes are unfortunately sensitive to motion and flow artifacts, with the mFFE the echoes are still cumulated afterwards. The use of the head-neck coil provides better SNR. Important are good flow compensation, rest slab, try out foldover direction l/r vs. a/p. Shimming may help, synergy is sometimes better as clear, don't take too many slices, but maybe the signal loss is also a technical problem. Problems in the lung region are common. In short, we use 2D T2 TSE with continuous flow comp.

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Steven Ford

Fri. 26 Oct.18,
02:29

[Reply (1 of 2) to:
'When to shim?'
started by: 'Matt H'
on Fri. 27 Oct.17]


 
  Category: 
General

 
When to shim?
you ask a complex question. Any sequence that is not a standard spin echo can benefit from shimming, but its not always worth it.

If you are scanning a knee in the center of the magnet, or nearly so, you might not see much difference in gradient echo scans, which in general are quite sensitive to shim problems. But if you are doing fat-water separation or fatsat images, you will see a difference even in this example.

Because hardware varies, its hard to say in one blanket statement for every case. For sure, do it on fatsat or fat-water imaging. The next most sensitive studies are off-center imaging such as shoulders. Beyond that, you should experiment a little. Of course, erring on the side of caution is a good idea.
 
 

Steven Ford
Professional Imaging Services, Inc.
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