Publication | Closed Access
Peripheral MR Angiography: Separation of Arteries from Veins with Flow-spoiled Gradient Pulses in Electrocardiography-triggered Three-dimensional Half-Fourier Fast Spin-Echo Imaging
134
Citations
10
References
2003
Year
EngineeringHealthy SubjectsBiomedical EngineeringMagnetic Resonance ImagingBlood FlowStrokeVascular ImagingNeurologyAtherosclerosisCardiologyBlood Flow MeasurementRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingVascular ImageMedical ImagingCerebral Blood FlowDigital Subtraction AngiographyPeripheral Mr AngiographyCardiovascular DiseaseBright BloodBiomedical ImagingNonenhanced Magnetic ResonanceMedicineFlow-spoiled Gradient Pulses
The authors evaluated a nonenhanced magnetic resonance (MR) angiographic technique that allows separation of arteries from veins. In 15 healthy subjects, peripheral MR angiography was performed with readout flow-spoiled gradient pulses in electrocardiography-triggered three-dimensional half-Fourier fast spin-echo MR imaging. Appropriate flow-spoiled gradient pulses were measured and applied in the three-dimensional acquisition to differentiate arteries and veins in the peripheral vasculature. Subtraction of the diastolic bright-blood arteries from the systolic black-blood arteries allowed visualization of the arteries by cancelling the veins, which are constantly depicted as bright blood throughout the cardiac cycle. Stronger flow-spoiled gradient pulses improved the depiction of slow-flow arteries even in the distal foot and hand vessels.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1