## Abstract ## Purpose To verify the potential of ungated spiral phase‐contrast (USPC), which has been shown to provide accurate and reproducible time‐averaged measurements of pulsatile flow, for rapid measurement of renal artery blood flow (RABF) in vivo. ## Materials and Methods The RABF rates
Comparison of cerebral artery blood flow measurements with gated cine and ungated phase-contrast techniques
✍ Scribed by Dieter R. Enzmann; Michael P. Marks; Norbert J. Pelc
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 912 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1053-1807
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Cine phase‐contrast (PC) magnetic resonance (MR) pulse sequences have been used to measure blood flow in a variety of vessels. Because the cine PC sequence is time‐consuming, this prospective study was undertaken to compare it with an ungated PC technique for measuring average blood flow in individual cerebral arteries to potentially achieve substantial time savings. The following cerebral arteries were studied in 10 healthy volunteers: carotid, basilar, middle cerebral, anterior cerebral, and posterior cerebral. Imaging planes were placed perpendicular to the vessel of interest, and velocity encoding, ranging from 40 to 250 cm/sec, was matched to individual arteries. Good correlation between cine and ungated PC blood flow measurements was obtained for both high‐ and low‐flow vessels, with an overall correlation coefficient of 978. The ungated PC sequence, because of its short imaging time, allows measurement of the blood volume flow rate in the circle of Willis in approximately 20 minutes, a clinically acceptable time.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## Purpose: To compare nongated three‐dimensional (3D) contrast‐enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (CE‐MRA) with 3D‐navigated cardiac‐gated steady‐state free‐precession bright blood (3D‐nav SSFP) and noncontrast 2D techniques for ascending aorta dimension measurements. ## Materia