Steven Ford
Thu. 2 Dec.10, 15:18
[Reply (1 of 2) to: 'T1&T2 WAIGHTED MEANING ?' started by: 'BINU VAEGHESE' on Wed. 1 Dec.10]
Category:
Basics and Physics |
T1&T2 WAIGHTED MEANING ? |
All MRI images have contrast (the bright and the dark) that is based on properties of the tissue that's being imaged. In MRI (unlike, for example, CT) those images are based on a combination of several physical properties. So to some extent ALL MRI images are based partly on property A, property B, etc.
The tissue properties that are referred to include proton density (how many hydrogen nuclei are in a given area), motion, and two other properties that are called T1 and T2. These are properties that can be seen onloy by using the MRI instrument, much as without a microscope one cannot see inside a cell.
A T1 weighted image is one in which the differences between T1 properties of the various tissues are the predominant reason why some parts of the image are bright and others are not as bright.
This is medically useful because, since T1 and T2 are distinct properties, diseased tissue may show up different than normal tissue on either the T1 weighted scan or the T2.
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