1 on human magnetic resonance imaging at 8 T. The authors present a transaxial image of the human head acquired at 8 T in a plane above the ventricles, from which they 'demonstrate that clinical imaging will be possible at 8 T and that reasonable quality head images can be obtained'. In my opinion t
Human magnetic resonance imaging at 8 T
β Scribed by P.-M. L. Robitaille; A. M. Abduljalil; A. Kangarlu; X. Zhang; Y. Yu; R. Burgess; S. Bair; P. Noa; L. Yang; Hui Zhu; B. Palmer; Z. Jiang; D. M. Chakeres; D. Spigos
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 174 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0952-3480
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In this work, we present the first human magnetic resonance image (MRI) obtained at ultrahigh field strengths (8 T). We demonstrate that clinical imaging will be possible at 8 T and that reasonable quality head images can be obtained at this field strength. Most importantly, we emphasize that the power required to excite the spins at 8 T is much lower than had previously been predicted by the nuclear magnetic resonance theory. A 90Β°pulse in the head at 8 T requires only $0.085 J of energy (90 W for a 2-lobe 4 ms sinc pulse). Based on measurements at 4 T, 1-2 J of energy should have been utilized to achieve a 90Β°excitation at 8 T. The fact that the energy required for spin excitation at 8 T is much lower than predicted by the NMR theory, will be extremely important to the viability of ultrahigh field imaging, since concerns related to power absorption and specific absorption rate (SAR) violations at ultrahigh field are alleviated. As such, it will be possible to utilize RF intensive pulse sequences and adiabatic spin excitation at 8 T without significant risk to the subject.
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