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MR vascular imaging with a fast gradient refocusing pulse sequence and reformatted images from transaxial sections.
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1987
Year
EngineeringFast GradientMagnetic ResonanceBiomedical EngineeringMagnetic Resonance ImagingImaging GradientsVascular ImagingNeurologyMr Vascular ImagingRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingVascular ImageMedical ImagingNeuroimagingContrast AgentMedical Image ComputingDiagnostic NeuroradiologyDigital Subtraction AngiographyTransaxial SectionsFlow Compensation GradientsBiomedical ImagingMedicine
The authors present a method for obtaining magnetic resonance (MR) images of intra- and extracranial vessels from thin contiguous transaxial sections. A section-selective gradient refocusing pulse sequence with a short repetition time caused flow-related enhancement from spins that flowed perpendicular to the transaxial sections. The signal was further enhanced by means of flow compensation gradients to rephase any phase shifts resulting from moving spins in the presence of the imaging gradients. Coronal and sagittal sections, reformatted from multiple transaxial sections, are shown to have excellent vessel contrast without the use of contrast material. These images were obtained in 12 minutes of acquisition time from as many as 60 sections of 3-mm thickness. Such a technique shows significant promise for MR angiography.