## Abstract Echo‐planar spectroscopic imaging (EPSI) can be used for fast spectroscopic imaging of water and fat resonances at high resolution to improve structural and functional imaging. Because of the use of oscillating gradients during the free induction decay (FID), spectra obtained with EPSI
Analysis of T2 limitations and off-resonance effects on spatial resolution and artifacts in echo-planar imaging
✍ Scribed by Farhad Farzaneh; Stephen J. Riederer; Norbert J. Pelc
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 914 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Several aspects of blipped echo‐planar imaging (EPI) are treated mathematically. An expression relating the necessary readout gradient strength and sampling time to the spatial resolution and readout duration is derived. It is shown how the net spatial resolution may be limited by the object's T2 characteristics and B~o~ field homogeneity, irrespective of the number of sampled points. Additionally, off‐resonance effects result in a loss of spatial resolution and image distortion to a considerably greater degree than in conventional two‐dimensional Fourier transform imaging. The extent of these effects is directly related to the time required to acquire the data matrix, and is therefore amplified when EPI is implemented on a standard commercial whole‐body system which because of limited gradient performance uses necessarily longer sampling durations. Specific hardware modifications to a standard commercial imager are considered to allow successful EPI implementation. EPI image characteristics are compared quantitatively with those of conventional methods. © 1990 Academic Press, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The purpose of our study was to evaluate the effect of respiratory motion on the image contrast of T2‐weighted fast spin‐echo (FSE) images of the liver as well as the reduction of motion artifact using respiratory triggering of the data acquisition. We imaged the livers of 10 healthy vo
__k-t__ Sensitivity-encoded (__k-t__ SENSE) acceleration has been used to improve spatial resolution, temporal resolution, and slice coverage in first-pass cardiac magnetic resonance myocardial perfusion imaging. This study compares the effect of investing the speed-up afforded by __k-t__ SENSE acce