MRI Week5 - ImageContrast - FOV - Resolution
MRI Week5 - ImageContrast - FOV - Resolution
MRI Week5 - ImageContrast - FOV - Resolution
Week 5:
Image Contrast, Field of View, and
Resolution
Sung-Hong Park
Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST
Contents
Field of View
N
S
Resolution
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S
Gradient Echo and Spin Echo
Gradient Echo Imaging
𝑇𝑅
𝑇𝐸 𝑇𝐸
RF ...
𝐺𝑥 …
𝐺𝑦 …
Sampling Sampling
ADC …
The prephase and frequency encoding gradients generate gradient echo.
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The time from the RF pulse center to the echo center is called echo time (typically denoted as TE).
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The time from one RF pulse center to the next RF pulse center is called time to repeat (typically
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denoted as TR). ( defined for RF pulses exciting the same slice location)
Typically the slice refocusing, prephase, and phase encoding gradients are applied simultaneously.
N
S
Spin Echo
180˚ RF
90˚ RF
Time
FID
Spin echo
TE/2
MZ TE
90˚ Slow
180˚
Fast spin
Two successive RF pulses induce a spin echo.
After the first RF pulse, the magnetization is dephased by spin-spin interaction
(irreversible) and magnetic field inhomogeneity (reversible).
When 180˚ RF pulse is applied, all transverse magnetizations are flipped around
transverse plane. This makes the fast spins lagging the phase and slow spins leading the
phase.
The dephased magnetization regroups and generates a spin echo.
The time between the 90˚ and 180˚ RF pulses is identical to the time between the 180˚ RF
and the center of the spin echo.
Spin Echo Imaging
𝑇𝑅
𝑇𝐸
𝑇𝐸/2 𝑇𝐸/2
90˚ RF 180˚ RF 90˚ RF
RF ...
Spin Echo
𝐺𝑧 …
𝐺𝑥 …
𝐺𝑦 …
Sampling
ADC …
The only differences from gradient echo imaging are (i) 180 RF pulse and (ii) change in polarity in
N
S
the prephase gradient ( The 180 RF pulse changes phases of prephase gradient too.)
Definitions of echo time (TE) and time to repeat (TR) are almost the same as gradient echo imaging.
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Spin Echo Imaging (cont.)
There are hundreds of MR imaging techniques and most of them can be
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S( x, y) S0( x, y)1 e
TE. TR / T1( x, y ) TE / T2 ( x, y )
e
N
S
Contrast Mechanism in
Spin Echo Imaging
Contrast mechanism (1)
One of major advantages of MRI is the great soft tissue discrimination of the
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images.
The definition of image contrast is the difference in color (or signal) that
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Contrast mechanism (2)
z z z z z
90°
Long T1
(ex. GM)
y y y y y
x x x x x
z z z z z
90°
Short T1
(ex. WM)
y y y y y
x x x x x
Difference in T1 relaxation time can lead to the image contrast depending on TR.
N
S
Contrast mechanism (3)
T1 relaxation T2 decay
Mz Mxy
1 WM 1
GM GM
WM
TR TE
For example, T1 and T2 relaxation times are different between brain gray
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Contrast mechanism (4)
Several parameters affecting image contrast that can be manipulated by the operator.
N
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Flip angle
··
·
y y y y y
x x x x x
Magnetization TR and TE
WM
Signal intensity
GM
GM
WM
TR TE
𝑇𝐸 𝑇𝑅
Signal intensity ∝ S0(x, y)exp(− )(1 − exp − )
N
S
𝑇2(𝑥,𝑦) 𝑇1(𝑥,𝑦)
How do TE and TR affect the MR image? (1)
1. Long TR and long TE
Magnetization
WM
GM
GM
WM
TR TE
Long TR : TR 23 times T1 of tissue of interest (e.g., GM or WM, 0.81.5 sec),
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complete T1 relaxation (no T1 contrast), better signal intensity, longer scan time
Long TE : T2 decay to maximiz the signal difference between tissues of interest (GM
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How do TE and TR affect the MR image? (2)
2. Long TR and short TE
Magnetization
WM
GM
GM
WM
TR TE
complete T1 relaxation (no T1 contrast), better signal intensity, longer scan time
How TE and TR affect MR image?
3. Short TR and short TE
Magnetization
WM
GM GM
WM
TR TE
Short TR : T1 recovery to maximize the signal difference between tissues of interest
N
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Different Image Contrasts
TE
T2-weighting
T1-weighting PD-weighting
T
R
Contrast Mechanism in
Gradient Echo Imaging
Equations for Gradient Echo Imaging
• Gradient echo imaging is often performed with a flip angle smaller than 90.
• After the first pulse
M z (t ) M 0 cos( )e t /T1 M 0(1 e t /T1 )
• Assume TR >> T2 (transverse magnetization is zero at the moment of
a new pulse.
• At the moment of the second pulse,
M z (TR ) M 0 cos( )e TR /T M 0(1 e TR /T )
1 1
Equations for Gradient Echo Imaging
TR / T1( x, y )
1 e TE / T2* ( x, y )
S( x, y) S0( x, y) sin( ) e
TR / T1( x, y )
1 cos( )e
Ernst Angle
TR / T1( x, y )
1 e TE / T2* ( x, y )
S( x, y) S0( x, y) sin( ) e
TR / T1( x, y )
1 cos( )e
• What is the optimal TR when flip angle is 90?
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Contrast in Gradient Echo Images
TR / T1( x, y )
1 e TE / T2* ( x, y )
S( x, y) S0( x, y) sin( ) e
TR / T1( x, y )
1 cos( )e
Proton density (PD) weighted imaging
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∗
Long TE (𝑇𝐸 = ~𝑇2 of tissues) (T2* contrast)
Long TR (TR 23 times T1 of tissues) or small flip angle (<< Ernst angle) (no T1
contrast)
Different Image Contrasts in Gradient Echo Imaging
TE
T2*-weighting
T1-weighting PD-weighting
T2*-weighted images are useful for detecting veins and some pathologic
N
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Field of View
Sampling Theorem (1D)
… …
𝑥 𝑥 𝑥
𝑥 𝑥
Antialiasing filter
𝐻𝑆(𝑢) (Lowpass filter)
𝐻(𝑢)
… …
𝑢
… … 𝑢
𝑢
1/𝑥 fs=1/𝑥 fs=1/𝑥
Lowpass filter bandwidth (antialiasing filter bandwidth, receiver banwidth) and the
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sampling frequency (fs=1/𝑥) are different, but are typically considered the same in MRI.
Sampling in MRI
MR imaging is a procedure that samples K-space. Analog-to-digital converter (ADC)
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performs the digitization of the signal, and the acquired data is stored in k-space.
𝑇 = 𝑁 ∙ ∆𝑇
T : sampling time for N points, N : number of sampling points, ∆T : sampling time per point
1
Sampling rate, 𝑓𝑠(= ), is defined as the rate at which the signal is sampled and
N
∆𝑇
S
digitized.
Antialiasing filter in ADC receiver bandwidth (rBW)= [-𝑓𝑠/2 , 𝑓𝑠/2]
N
S
The total number of samples taken (N) is determined by the number of voxels desired in
the frequency-encoding direction. (typical range of N: 64 512)
Field Of View (FOV) (1)
Frequency
Gradient
f/2
-FOV/2 FOV/2
0 rBW
Center X
-f/2
FOV
a. steeper gradient
b. Large FOV
Field Of View (FOV) (2)
Frequency
Gradient
f/2
-FOV/2 FOV/2
0 rBW
Center X
-f/2
FOV
When gradient is fixed, the sampling frequency (𝑓) determines the size of the
N
S
Field Of View (FOV) (3)
Sampling along the frequency encoding direction (𝑥) is accompanied by readout
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gradient, 𝐺𝑥 .
N
The sampling frequency (𝑓𝑠 ) or the interval [-𝑓𝑠 /2, 𝑓𝑠 /2] determines the size of the
S
The denominator, 𝛾𝐺
ො 𝑥 𝑇𝑠 , represents a step ∆𝑢 (∆𝑘𝑥 ) in the horizontal axis of the k-
S
space. 𝐺𝑥 ∙ ∆𝑇
1 1 𝐺𝑥
∆𝑢 = ∆𝑘𝑥 = 𝛾𝐺
ො 𝑥 𝑇𝑠 𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥 = =
∆𝑢 ∆𝑘𝑥
∆𝑇
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S
FOV in the frequency encoding direction is the inverse of the step size in the horizontal
direction of the k-space.
Field Of View (FOV) (4)
Comparison between k-space and image
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S
𝐺𝑥 ∙ ∆𝑇
𝐺𝑥
K-space Image
FFT
∆𝑇
∆𝐾𝑥 𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥
Field Of View (FOV) (5)
𝐺𝑦 .
N
S
1 1 1
𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑦 = = =
𝛾∆𝐴
ො 𝑦 ∆𝑣 ∆𝑘𝑦
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S
FOV in the phase encoding direction is also the inverse of the step size in the
vertical direction of the k-space.
Resolution
Resolution (1)
In MRI, the k‐space covers only a finite region in the frequency domain.
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are 𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥 1 1 1
𝛿𝑥 = = = =
𝑁𝑥 𝑁𝑥 𝛾𝐺
ො 𝑥 𝑇𝑠 𝑁𝑥 ∆𝑢 𝑁𝑥 ∆𝑘𝑥
𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑦 1 1 1
𝛿𝑦 = = = =
𝑁𝑦 𝑁𝑦 𝛾∆𝐴
ො 𝑦 𝑁𝑦 ∆𝑣 𝑁𝑦 ∆𝑘𝑦
The spatial resolution of an MR image is inverse of the maximum k‐space ranges (𝑁𝑥 ∙
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∆𝑘𝑥 , 𝑁𝑦 ∙ ∆𝑘𝑦 ).
K-space Image
FFT
1
𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥 ∆𝑥 =
𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
Resolution (2)
fs fs/2
Gx ∆𝐾𝑥 Gx 2 · ∆𝐾𝑥
k-space
𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
VS
2𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
Image ∆𝑥
∆𝑥
2
𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥 /2
𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥
Increasing the resolution, decreasing the FOV.
N S
Resolution (3)
2Gx fs
fs 2∆𝐾𝑥
Gx ∆𝐾𝑥
k-space
𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
VS
2𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
Image ∆𝑥
∆𝑥 2
𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥 /2
𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥
Increasing the resolution, decreasing the FOV.
N S
Resolution (4)
2f
Gx fs 2Gx ∆𝐾𝑥
∆𝐾𝑥
𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥 𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
k-space
𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
VS 𝐾𝑥 𝑚𝑎𝑥
Image
∆𝑥 ∆𝑥
𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥 𝐹𝑂𝑉𝑥