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Week1 MRI Introduction

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
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Week1 MRI Introduction

dd

Uploaded by

lotus leaf
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MRI Fundamentals

Week 1:
Overview of MRI

Sung-Hong Park
Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST


Biomedical Imaging Modalities
Radiographic imaging (X-ray, CT)
N
S

- Transmission of X-rays through the body


- Detection of X-rays on the opposite side of the body

Nuclear medicine (planar scintigraphy, SPECT, PET)


N
S

- Injection of radiotracers in the bloodstream of the body


- Detection of gamma rays emitted from radiotracers within the body

Ultrasound
N
S

- Transmission of ultrasonic waves toward the body


- Detection of reflected ultrasonic waves from the body

MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)


N
S

- Placing the body in a strong magnetic field to cause spin systems to


precess
- Transmitting radio frequency energy to the body (magnetic resonance)
- Receiving radio frequency energy induced in the body

Electromagnetic Spectrum

Radio Microwave Infrared Visible Ultraviolet X-ray Gamma ray

Wavelength (m) 103 10-2 10-5 0.5x10-6 10-8 10-10 10-12

Frequency (Hz) 104 108 1012 1015 1016 1018 1020

Ultrasound Optical Imaging PET


MRI
CT


Beauty of Biomedical Imaging
Noninvasive !!!
– Ultrasound, MRI (completely noninvasive)
– X-ray, CT, SPECT, PET (radiation exposure, still considered noninvasive)

Tomographic Imaging
– CT, SPECT, PET, Ultrasound, MRI (tomographic imaging)
– X-ray, planar scintigraphy (projection imaging)

Physiology, Metabolism, and Function


– SPECT, PET, Diffusion/Perfusion MRI, fMRI


MRI in comparison with other imaging modalities

High spatial resolution


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High soft tissue contrast


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Tomographic imaging
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Scan along any direction


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Noninvasive
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Integration of many different imaging modalities (anatomy,


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physiology, metabolism, function, etc)


MRI in comparison with other imaging modalities

Pulse sequence : time sequencing of currents in radio


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frequency coil(s) and gradient coils


N

Manipulation of pulse sequences provides various


S

information of our body beyond anatomy


Bae et al, International Journal of Imaging System and Technology, 2013;23(2):152-156

Physiological and functional imaging <Angiogram & Venogram>


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Ex) Perfusion, diffusion tensor imaging, functional MRI

The fastest growing imaging modality recent years


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Park et al, NeuroImage 2011;58(1):168-176

Park et al, Magn Reson Imag 2013;31(7):1044-1050

<Perfusion Image> <DTI> <fMRI from rat and human>



MRI signal source
Magnetic moment
 What is the main signal source of MRI?
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μ
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• Protons (hydrogens, 1H)

𝛷 N
 Why protons?
N

Spin angular momentum


=
S

• Protons behave like tiny magnets. H+

• 70% of body consists of water (H2O). S


 What other nuclei can be used for MRI?
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• 13C, 19F, 23Na, 17O, 31P, and others with odd


atomic number or odd mass number.


Brief Procedure of MR Image Acquisition
MRI Pulse sequence

Signal Acquisition

MR Image K-space

FFT


Synopsis of MRI

• Magnetic: Putting a subject in the strong magnetic field


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generated by the main magnet

• Resonance: Transmitting radio frequency (RF) energy to the


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subject through an RF coil, turning off transmitter, and


receiving RF signals emitted by the subject using another RF
coil (or the same RF coil)

• Imaging: Spatially modulating the magnetic field strength to


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distinguish signals from different locations using gradient coils.


Three Major Hardware Components of MRI
• Magnet (typically superconducting) (Magnetic)
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• A radiofrequency transmitter and receiver (Resonance)


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• A set of 3 gradient coils (X, Y, Z) (Imaging)


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Superconducting magnet

B0

Gradient coils RF coil



Schematic Diagram of MRI Instrumentation

Control
RF Gradient Console
electronics
electronics amplifier

Pulse sequence
generator

Image reconstruction computer



MRI Magnet
How strong are the magnets in MRI machines?
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 Magnetic field strength of earth ranges from 0.25 to 0.65


gauss, average 0.5 gauss.

 1 Tesla = 10,000 gauss

 Human MRI scanners : 0.5T, 1.0T, 1.5T, 3.0T, 7.0T, 9.4T . . .

 Recently FDA approved 7T human MRI for clinical diagnosis.


However, most MRI scanners for clinical diagnosis is up to 3T
at this point.

Main function of magnet


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 Causes proton spins to rotate (precess) at a frequency


proportional to the magnetic field, called resonance frequency.
13

MRI Magnet

Types of MRI Magnet Superconducting Magnet


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 Superconducting magnet
- Can achieve high magnetic field
- High maintenance cost for magnet
- Popular in hospitals

 Permanent magnet
- Magnetic field strength is limited to
about 1T. Vacuum
- No maintenance cost for magnet Liquid N2 ( < 77˚K )
Liquid He ( < 4.2˚ K )
Superconducting coil (Niobium-titanium wire)
Iron shield

• Superconducting property at temperature


lower than the critical temperature
14

MRI Magnet

Why are MRI scans so expensive?


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 Difficulty in making the magnetic field uniform.


- more difficult with higher magnetic field and wider
bore size, which is directly related to the price of MRI.

 Helium for maintaining superconducting magnet


(Helium is expensive!)

 MRI is an integration of a lot of hardware equipment,


requiring high maintenance cost.

 So, MRI scans are expensive ! !

15


Radio Frequency (RF) coil

Source

A (440 Hz)

Transmission (Tx) coil Resonance

C B A G

Reception (Rx) coil


Signal Induction

• Two separate transmission and reception RF coils


MR
can be used, but a single RF coil can also be used signal

for both transmission and reception of MR signals. time


17


Radio Frequency (RF) coil
Transmission (Tx) RF coil

Source

A (440 Hz)

Resonance

C B A G

• The proton spins that have the same frequency as the frequency in the transmission
coil will receive energy and get excited, which is called magnetic resonance.
• Transmission of homogeneous energy is important, so the transmission is often
performed with a large RF coil (typically a body coil premounted on the scanner).
18

Radio Frequency (RF) coil
Reception (Rx) coil

Signal
Induction

MR
signal

time
• When the transmission RF energy is off, MR signals will be induced and detectable
in the receiver RF coil.
• High sensitivity to the object is important, so the reception of MR signals is often
performed with a smaller RF coil close to the object. 19


Gradient Coils for Spatial Information

 In contrast to other imaging modalities (CT, Xray, SPECT, PET, Ultrasound,


N
S

optical imaging), positional information of detectors (RF coils) is not used to


get spatial information in MRI (exception : parallel imaging in MRI).

 How to get spatial information in MRI?


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 Gradient coils

21

Gradient Coils for Spatial Information

X X

Gradient coils

Y Y

Z
• The main magnetic fields are along the Z direction. X and Y gradient coils are to modulate the
N
S

main magnetic field strengths along X and Y, but not to generate any fields along X or Y. 22


Gradient Coils for Spatial Information
X (or Y, Z)
• Magnetic field induced by a gradient coil is 1.5+△B Tesla
N

+10 cm
S

(64+△f MHz)
superimposed on the field of MRI magnet.
• Varying magnetic field or gradient causes
N
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precession frequency  to be a function of


spatial location.
0 cm 1.5 Tesla
B(x,y,z)  (x,y,z) (64 MHz)

• Spatially different precession frequencies


N
S

enable us to get spatial information, i.e.,


imaging.
1.5△B Tesla
-10 cm (64△f MHz)
Gradient

MRI safety

 Is MRI safe?
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 No ionizing radiation
S N
 Pacemakers, artificial limbs, devices that contain metal are not allowed.

 SAR (specific absorption rate)


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 A measure of the rate at which energy is absorbed by the human body when exposed to a radio
frequency (RF) electromagnetic field

 Unit of SAR : watts per kilogram (W/kg)

 There is an upper limit of SAR for safety. Most clinical scanners do not allow any scan that exceeds the
SAR limit.

24

Summary
MRI is an noninvasive biomedical imaging device with relatively high spatial
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resolution, various soft tissue contrast, and integration of many different imaging
modalities in one single scanner.

Typical clinical MRI has a field strength up to 3T, 60,000 times greater than the
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S

earth’s magnetic field.

A magnet generates magnetic fields that causes protons to precess at a frequency


N
S

proportional to the strength of the magnetic fields (resonance frequency).

A radiofrequency (RF) coil transmits and/or receives signals at the resonance


N
S

frequency.

Gradient coils modulate the resonance frequency depending on the spatial


N
S

location along X, Y, and Z.

MRI is safe and does not cause ionizing radiation, but requires caution about
N
S

metal objects in the body and specific absorption rate.


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