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.