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Result : Searchterm 'Signal Intensity' found in 1 term [] and 55 definitions []
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Searchterm 'Signal Intensity' was also found in the following services: 
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News  (5)  Resources  (1)  Forum  (4)  
 
Quadrupole ArtifactInfoSheet: - Artifacts - 
Case Studies, 
Reduction Index, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Artifacts -
 
Quick Overview
Artifact Information
NAME
Quadrupole artifact
DESCRIPTION
Signal loss, intensity variations
REASON
B1 disturbance
HELP
Fat suppression (SPIR or FatSat) is very critical to the magnetic field homogeneity. Eddy currents in the patient results in B1 disturbance from left to right and from anterior to posterior. The artifact is seen as signal intensity variations with SPIR, like a signal intensity loss diagonal in the image. The short T1 inversion recovery (STIR) sequence is due to another type of fat suppression insensitive to this artifact.
mri safety guidance
Image Guidance
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Searchterm 'Signal Intensity' was also found in the following service: 
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Radiology  (1) Open this link in a new window
Slice Thickness
 
(THK) The thickness of an imaging slice. As the slice profile may not be sharp edged, a criterion such as the distance between the points at half the sensitivity of the maximum (FWHM) or the equivalent rectangular width (the width of a rectangular slice profile with the same maximum height and same area) is used to determine thickness.
mri safety guidance
Image Guidance
For the image quality its important to choose the best fitting slice thickness for an examination. When a small item is entirely contained within the slice thickness with other tissue of differing signal intensity then the resulting signal displayed on the image is a combination of these two intensities. If the slice is the same thickness or thinner than the small structure, only that structures signal intensity is displayed on the image. This partial volume averaging effect explains the vanishing of fine details by choosing slices too large for the scanned object.

See also Partial Volume Artifact.
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• View the DATABASE results for 'Slice Thickness' (63).Open this link in a new window

 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
MRI Quality Control Program
   by www.simplyphysics.com    
  News & More:
Optimizing Musculoskeletal MR
   by rad.usuhs.mil    
MRI Resources 
Quality Advice - Online Books - Implant and Prosthesis pool - Claustrophobia - Cardiovascular Imaging - Open Directory Project
 
ABLAVAR™InfoSheet: - Contrast Agents - 
Intro, Overview, 
Characteristics, 
Types of, 
etc.
 
ABLAVAR™ (formerly named Vasovist™) is a blood pool agent for magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), which opens new medical imaging possibilities in the evaluation of aortoiliac occlusive disease (AIOD) in patients with suspected peripheral vascular disease.
ABLAVAR™ binds reversibly to blood albumin, providing imaging with high spatial resolution up to 1 hour after injection, due to its high relaxivity and to the long lasting increased signal intensity of blood.
As with other contrast media: the possibility of serious or life-threatening anaphylactic or anaphylactoid reactions, including cardiovascular, respiratory and/or cutaneous manifestations, should always be considered.

WARNING:
NEPHROGENIC SYSTEMIC FIBROSIS
Gadolinium-based contrast agents increase the risk for nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF) in patients with acute or chronic severe renal insufficiency (glomerular filtration rate less than 30 mL/min/1.73m2), or acute renal insufficiency of any severity due to the hepato-renal syndrome or in the perioperative liver transplantation period.

See also Cardiovascular Imaging, Adverse Reaction, Molecular Imaging, and MRI Safety.
Drug Information and Specification
NAME OF COMPOUND
Diphenylcyclohexyl phosphodiester-Gd-DTPA, gadofosveset trisodium, MS-325
CENTRAL MOIETY
Gd2+
CONTRAST EFFECT
T1, predominantly positive enhancement
20-45 mmol-1sec-1, Bo=0,47T
PHARMACOKINETIC
Intravascular
825 mOsmol/kg H2O
CONCENTRATION
244 mg/mL, 0.25mmol/mL
DOSAGE
0.12 mL/kg, 0.03 mmol/kg
PREPARATION
ready to use
DEVELOPMENT STAGE
FDA approved
DISTRIBUTOR
See below
PRESENTATION
10 mL vials
DO NOT RELY ON THE INFORMATION PROVIDED HERE, THEY ARE
NOT A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PACKAGE INSERT!
Distribution Information
TERRITORY
TRADE NAME
DEVELOPMENT
STAGE
DISTRIBUTOR
EU
Approved
USA, Canada, Australia
ABLAVAR™
Approved
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• View the NEWS results for 'ABLAVAR™' (1).Open this link in a new window.
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Ablavar Prescribing Information
   by www.ablavar.com    
  News & More:
The first FDA-approved blood-pool MR agent offers additional time for imaging and possibly some new applications
Thursday, 1 July 2010   by www.radiologytoday.net    
Searchterm 'Signal Intensity' was also found in the following services: 
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News  (5)  Resources  (1)  Forum  (4)  
 
Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent ContrastInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Functional MRI -
 
(BOLD) In MRI the changes in blood oxygenation level are visible. Oxyhaemoglobin (the principal haemoglobin in arterial blood) has no substantial magnetic properties, but deoxyhaemoglobin (present in the draining veins after the oxygen has been unloaded in the tissues) is strongly paramagnetic. It can thus serve as an intrinsic paramagnetic contrast agent in appropriately performed brain MRI. The concentration and relaxation properties of deoxyhaemoglobin make it a susceptibility , e.g. T2 relaxation effective contrast agent with little effect on T1 relaxation.
During activation of the brain, the oxygen consumption of the local tissue increase by approximately 5% with that the oxygen tension will decrease. As a consequence, after a short period of time vasodilatation occurs, resulting in a local increase of blood volume and flow by 20 - 40%. The incommensurate change in local blood flow and oxygen extraction increases the local oxygen level.
By using T2 weighted gradient echo EPI sequences, which are highly susceptibility sensitive and fast enough to capture the three-dimensional nature of activated brain areas will show an increase in signal intensity as oxyhaemoglobin is diamagnetic and deoxyhaemoglobin is paramagnetic. Other MR pulse sequences, such as spoiled gradient echo pulse sequences are also used.
As the effects are subtle and of the order of 2% in 1.5 T MR imaging, sophisticated methodology, paradigms and data analysis techniques have to be used to consistently demonstrate the effect.
As the BOLD effect is due to the deoxygenated blood in the draining veins, the spatial localization of the region where there is increased blood flow resulting in decreased oxygen extraction is not as precisely defined as the morphological features in MRI. Rather there is a physiological blurring, and is estimated that the linear dimensions of the physiological spatial resolution of the BOLD phenomenon are around 3 mm at best.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
IMAGE CONTRAST IN MRI(.pdf)
   by www.assaftal.com    
Vascular Filters of Functional MRI: Spatial Localization Using BOLD and CBV Contrast
  News & More:
A mechanistic computational framework to investigate the hemodynamic fingerprint of the blood oxygenation level-dependent signal
Tuesday, 29 August 2023   by analyticalsciencejournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com    
The utility of texture analysis of kidney MRI for evaluating renal dysfunction with multiclass classification model
Tuesday, 30 August 2022   by www.nature.com    
MRI Technique Used to Identify Future Risk of Binge Drinking
Monday, 6 January 2020   by www.diagnosticimaging.com    
Gold Acupuncture Needle MRI Pain Discovery
Friday, 3 January 2014   by www.healthcmi.com    
MRI method for measuring MS progression validated
Thursday, 19 December 2013   by www.eurekalert.org    
Searchterm 'Signal Intensity' was also found in the following service: 
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Chemical Shift ImagingInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Spectroscopy pool -
 
(CSI) Chemical shift imaging is an extension of MR spectroscopy, allowing metabolite information to be measured in an extended region and to add the chemical analysis of body tissues to the potential clinical utility of Magnetic Resonance. The spatial location is phase encoded and a spectrum is recorded at each phase encoding step to allow the spectra acquisition in a number of volumes covering the whole sample. CSI provides mapping of chemical shifts, analog to individual spectral lines or groups of lines.
Spatial resolution can be in one, two or three dimensions, but with long acquisition times od full 3D CSI. Commonly a slice-selected 2D acquisition is used. The chemical composition of each voxel is represented by spectra, or as an image in which the signal intensity depends on the concentration of an individual metabolite. Alternatively frequency-selective pulses excite only a single spectral component.
There are several methods of performing chemical shift imaging, e.g. the inversion recovery method, chemical shift selective imaging sequence, chemical shift insensitive slice selective RF pulse, the saturation method, spatial and chemical shift encoded excitation and quantitative chemical shift imaging.

See also Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
1H MR Spectroscopy and Chemical Shift Imaging of the In Vivo Brain at 7 Tesla
Sunday, 26 November 2006   by tobias-lib.uni-tuebingen.de    
MRI evaluation of fatty liver in day to day practice: Quantitative and qualitative methods
Wednesday, 3 September 2014   by www.sciencedirect.com    
  News & More:
Spin echoes, CPMG and T2 relaxation - Introductory NMR & MRI from Magritek
2013   by www.azom.com    
mDIXON being developed to simplify and accelerate liver MRI
September 2010   by incenter.medical.philips.com    
MRI Resources 
MRI Training Courses - Jobs - Journals - Process Analysis - Mass Spectrometry - IR
 
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