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Result : Searchterm 'Phase' found in 35 terms [] and 251 definitions []
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Searchterm 'Phase' was also found in the following services: 
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Cardiac Phase
 
A particular point in the cardiac cycle.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
A Guide To Cardiac Imaging
   by www.simplyphysics.com    
Searchterm 'Phase' was also found in the following services: 
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Radiology  (17) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (77) Open this link in a new window
No Phase Wrap
 
(NPW / PNW - Phase No Wrap) If the receiving RF coil is sensitive to tissue signal arising from outside the desired FOV, this undesired signal may be incorrectly mapped, or wrapped back to a location within the image and is seen as artifact. This problem occurs in the phase encoding direction, where the phases of signal-bearing tissues outside of the FOV in the y-direction are a replication of the phases that are encoded within the FOV.
A user-selectable parameter maps this signal to its correct location outside the FOV, then discards any signal from outside the FOV before displaying the image. No phase wrap works by filling k-space to the same extent, using twice as many phase encoding steps. In order to be able to choose this parameter, in most cases more than an average is necessary.

See Foldover Suppression and Oversampling.
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MRI Resources 
Patient Information - Bioinformatics - Services and Supplies - Fluorescence - Non-English - Libraries
 
Phase Cycling
 
Techniques of signal excitation in which the phases of the exciting or refocusing RF pulses are systematically varied and the resulting signals are then suitably combined in order to reduce or eliminate certain artifacts.
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Searchterm 'Phase' was also found in the following services: 
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In Phase Image
 
The term in phase refers to an image in which the signals from two spectral components (such as fat and water) add constructively in a voxel. T1 weighted in phase images are acquired by a gradient echo-based technique with a short TR, TE and a high flip angle greater than 60 degrees. To some degree, in phase sequences are more sensitive to detection of focal hepatic lesions than out of phase for evaluating reduced lesion-to-liver contrast, but the choice for a T1 gradient echo sequence is still based on field strength, advanced imaging techniques (breath hold imaging), and physician preference.
 
Images, Movies, Sliders:
 MRI Liver In Phase  Open this link in a new window
    
 
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• View the DATABASE results for 'In Phase Image' (4).Open this link in a new window

 
Further Reading:
  News & More:
Direct Water and Fat Determination in Two-Point Dixon Imaging
April 2013   by scholarship.rice.edu    
Searchterm 'Phase' was also found in the following services: 
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Radiology  (17) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (77) Open this link in a new window
Phase Encoding
 
The process of locating a MR signal by altering the phase of spins in one dimension with a pulsed magnetic field gradient along that dimension prior to the acquisition of the signal.
If a gradient field is briefly switched on and then off again at the beginning of the pulse sequence right after the radio frequency pulse, the magnetization of the external voxels will either precess faster or slower relative to those of the central voxels.
During readout of the signal, the phase of the xy-magnetization vector in different columns will thus systematically differ. When the x- or y- component of the signal is plotted as a function of the phase encoding step number n and thus of time n TR, it varies sinusoidally, fast at the left and right edges and slow at the center of the image. Voxels at the image edges along the phase encoding direction are thus characterized by a higher 'frequency' of rotation of their magnetization vectors than those towards the center.
As each signal component has experienced a different phase encoding gradient pulse, its exact spatial reconstruction can be specifically and precisely located by the Fourier transformation analysis. Spatial resolution is directly related to the number of phase encoding levels (gradients) used. The phase encoding direction can be chosen, e.g. whenever oblique MR images are acquired or when exchanging frequency and phase encoding directions to control wrap around artifacts.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Magnetic resonance imaging
   by www.scholarpedia.org    
Aliasing or wrap around artifacts
Thursday, 31 March 2011   by de.slideshare.net    
MRI Resources 
MRI Training Courses - Equipment - Claustrophobia - Artifacts - RIS - Liver Imaging
 
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