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Result : Searchterm 'Flow Artifact' found in 2 terms [] and 10 definitions [], (+ 12 Boolean[] results
| 1 - 5 (of 24) nextResult Pages : [1] [2 3] [4 5] | | | | Searchterm 'Flow Artifact' was also found in the following services: | | | | |
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Flow Artifact | |
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Quick Overview Please note that there are different common names for this artifact.
REASON
Movement of body fluids
Flow effects in MRI produce a range of artifacts, e.g. intravascular signal void by time of flight effects; turbulent dephasing and first echo dephasing, caused by flowing blood.
Through movement of the hydrogen nuclei (e.g. blood flow), there is a location change between the time these nuclei experience a radio frequency pulse and the time the emitted signal is received (because the repetition time is asynchronous with the pulsatile flow).
The blood flow occasionally produces intravascular high signal intensities due to flow related enhancement, even echo rephasing and diastolic pseudogating. The pulsatile laminar flow within vessels often produces a complex multilayered band that usually propagates outside the head in the phase encoded direction. Blood flow artifacts should be considered as a special subgroup of motion artifacts.
Image Guidance
| | | | | | | • Share the entry 'Flow Artifact': | | | | Further Reading: | News & More:
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Quick Overview Please note that there are different common names for this artifact.
DESCRIPTION
Image non-uniform
REASON
Signal too intense
The received radio frequency signal is too strong, parts of the signal get lost by converting from analog to digital, resulting in a washed out image.
Image Guidance
| | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Radio Frequency Overflow Artifact' (2).
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(3D MRA) The 3D angiography technique can be applied to focus on fast flowing (arterial) blood and to visualize small tortuous vessels. 3D TOF images are less sensitive to turbulent flow artifacts.
The advantage of this approach is that the signal, acquired from the entire
volume has an increased signal to noise ratio. Slices are defined by a second phase encoded axis, which divides the volume into 'partitions'.
3D TOF MRA is acquired with 3D FT slabs or multiple overlapping thin 3D FT slabs ( MOTSA) depending on the coverage required and the range of flow-velocities under examination.
Such 3D techniques can provide equal spatial resolution along all three axes, i.e. be 'isotropic', or the partition thickness can be greater or less than the in plane spatial resolution in which case can be said to be 'anisotropic'.
The circle of Willis, anatomy as well as its fast arterial flow, lends itself well to both 3D TOF and 2D or 3D phase contrast angiography. | | | | | | • View the DATABASE results for '3 Dimensional Magnetic Resonance Angiography' (2).
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Quick Overview
NAME
Cerebro spinal fluid pulsation
Pulsatile cerebro spinal fluid flow produces ghost artifacts that are superimposed in the image.
Image Guidance
| | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Cerebro Spinal Fluid Pulsation Artifact' (3).
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Data clipping artifacts give images a washed-out, non-uniform appearance.
If the receiver gain increase, so that the signal level is larger than the maximum ADC value, the reconstructed image brightness was scaled to compensate this. The overall intensity loss as well as the extensive signal is reconstructed outside of the object.
This effect is called 'clipping' because on a plot of signal amplitude vs. time, it looks like the top and bottom of the echo has been 'clipped off' with scissors.
See Radio Frequency Overflow Artifact. | | | | | |
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