Motion of material being imaged, particularly flowing blood, can result in many possible effects in the images.
Fast moving blood produces
flow voids,
blood flowing in to the outer slices of an imaging volume produces high signals (
flow related enhancement, entry
slice phenomenon),
pulsatile
flow creates ghost images of the vessel extending across the image in the
phase encoding direction (image misregistration).
Flow-related
dephasing occurring when
spin isochromats are moving with different velocities in an external
gradient field G so that they acquire different phases. When these phases vary by more then 180° within a
voxel, substantial
spin dephasing results leading to considerable intravascular signal loss.
These effects can be understood as caused by
time of flight effects (washout or washin due to motion of nuclei between two consecutive spatially selective RF
excitations, repeated in times on the order of, or shorter than the relaxation times of blood) or
phase shifts (delay between
phase encoding and
frequency encoding) that can be acquired by excited spins moving along
magnetic field gradients.
The inconsistency of the signal resulting from pulsatile
flow can lead to artifacts in the image. The
flow effects can also be exploited for MR
angiography or
flow measurements.
See also
Flow Artifact.