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Journal ArticleDOI

Steady-State Magnetizations in Rapid NMR Imaging Using Small Flip Angles and Short Repetition Intervals

Kensuke Sekihara
- 01 Jan 1987 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 2, pp 157-164
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TLDR
The modified version of rapid imaging, where thephase rotation due to the phase encoding process is compensated for in each time interval, can have sensitivity superior to the original version where the phase rotation is not compensated for.
Abstract
The steady-state magnetizations in three versions of rapid NMR imaging using small flip angles and short repetition intervals are studied. It is shown that in the original version, the estimation using (1 - E1) sin ?/(1 - E1 cos ?) contains errors that depend on the increment of the phase rotation angle arising from the phase encoding process. The modified version of rapid imaging, where the phase rotation due to the phase encoding process is compensated for in each time interval, can have sensitivity superior to the original version where the phase rotation is not compensated for. Here, flip angles larger than the Ernst angle must be used. In the third version, the steady-state magnetization is obtained by a rapid imaging sequence in which the phase rotations arising not only from the application of the phase encoding gradient but also from the applications of other gradients are compensated for. Analysis of this version showed a remarkable increase in sensitivity although it required the use of an extremely uniform field. It is estimated that this increase reaches 80 percent with a repetition interval of 10 ms, although a field uniformity less than 1 ?T is necessary.

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Citations
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TL;DR: This work describes a new approach to multipoint Dixon fat–water separation that is amenable to pulse sequences that require short echo time increments, such as steady‐state free precession (SSFP) and fast spin‐echo (FSE) imaging, and extends to multicoil reconstruction with minimal additional complexity.
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MR fingerprinting using fast imaging with steady state precession (FISP) with spiral readout

TL;DR: This study explores the possibility of using gradient echo‐based sequences other than balanced steady‐state free precession (bSSFP) in the magnetic resonance fingerprinting (MRF) framework to quantify the relaxation parameters.
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Fat and water magnetic resonance imaging.

TL;DR: This article reviews the most commonly used techniques for fat suppression and fat–water imaging including 1) chemically selective fat suppression pulses “FAT‐SAT”; 2) spatial‐spectral pulses (water excitation); 3) short inversion time (TI) inversion recovery (STIR) imaging; 4) chemical shift based water–fat separation methods; and finally 5)Fat suppression and balanced steady‐state free precession (SSFP) sequences.
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Cardiac SSFP imaging at 3 Tesla

TL;DR: An optimized sequence protocol for cardiac SSFP imaging at 3.0T is derived, taking into account several partly adverse effects at higher field, such as increased field inhomogeneities, longer T1, and power deposition limitations.
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Spoiling of transverse magnetization in steady-state sequences

TL;DR: A detailed analysis is presented of a method to eliminate transverse magnetization prior to each rf excitation in pulse sequences with TR < T2, and it is shown that artifact‐free images with high T1 contrast can be obtained only if a phase shift that is incremented during each TR interval is applied to the transversal magnetization.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Application of Fourier Transform Spectroscopy to Magnetic Resonance

TL;DR: In this paper, the application of a new Fourier transform technique to magnetic resonance spectroscopy is explored, which consists of applying a sequence of short rf pulses to the sample to be investigated and Fourier-transforming the response of the system.
Journal ArticleDOI

FLASH imaging rapid NMR imaging using low flip-angle pulses

TL;DR: A new method for rapid NMR imaging dubbed FLASH ( fast low-a ngle sh ot) imaging is described which allows measuring times of the order of 1 s (64 × 128 pixel resolution) or 6 s (256 × 256 pixels), resulting in about a 100-fold reduction in measuring time without sacrificing spatial resolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid NMR imaging of dynamic processes using the FLASH technique.

TL;DR: FLASH (Fast Low‐Angle SHot) imaging is a new method for rapid NMR imaging which has been demonstrated to provide abdominal images without artifacts due to respiratory or peristaltic motions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phase and intensity anomalies in fourier transform NMR

TL;DR: In this article, a simple device is proposed which effectively suppresses these anomalies by introducing a small random delay in the timing of the radiofrequency pulses, which may be masked by short-term instabilities in the field/frequency ratio or by incoherence introduced by heteronuclear noise decoupling.
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