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Receiver CoilInfoSheet: - Coils - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
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A coil, or antenna, positioned within the imaging volume and connected to the receiver circuitry that is used to detect or receive the MR signal from the patient as the disturbed spins relax back into their equilibrium distribution. Also called receive-only coil.
Special-purpose coils are designed to optimize the SNR from a given region of the body. State-of-the-art coil systems include the use of four or more coils with four separate receivers. This method is often referred to as a phased array system. Receiver coil types include also solenoid, planar, volume and quadrature coils. The quality of the MR images depends on the SNR of the acquired signal from the patient. SNR is of the utmost importance in obtaining clear images of the interior of the human body.
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Transmitter
 
The portion of the MRI system that produces the RF current and delivers it to the transmitting coil (antenna). The RF signal produced by the transmitter is used to excite the protons in the imaging volume. Phase sensitive detectors (electronic device in which the output is dependent on the instantaneous difference in phase between two input signals) form part of the frequency synthesis pathway.
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Wires (MRI Safety Risk)MRI Resource Directory:
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Pacemaker lead wires, ECG, and plethysmographic cables can also as surface-coil connections act as antennae. Usually the materials of such wires are not ferromagnetic.
mri safety guidance
MRI Safety Guidance
Gradient and radio frequency fields may induce current into these wires and thus cause fibrillations and burns. This presents a risk to the patient and must be eliminated before the examination. The risk of heating during the MRI scan is dependent on the length and the material of these wires as well as the used field strength. If these wires are outside the RF field there is no risk of heating to expect.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
A Primer on Medical Device Interactions with Magnetic Resonance Imaging Systems
   by govpulse.us    
  News & More:
Newer Heart Devices Safe During MRI
Monday, 23 August 2004   by www.hospimedica.com    
MRI in Patients with Implanted Devices: Current Controversies
Monday, 1 August 2016   by www.acc.org    
Redesigned systems may increase access to MRI for patients with implanted medical devices
Tuesday, 5 May 2015   by medicalxpress.com    
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