Paper
19 September 1985 Physics Of High Resolution Sodium MRI Of The Brain
S . K. Mun, J. B. Ra, S. K. Hilal, S . W. Lee, Z. H. Cho, I. K. Mun
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
While proton imaging has become a routine diagnostic modality, sodium imaging has been difficult to obtain because of its inherent weakness in signal strength due to significantly lower concentration in tissue. -This difficulty of poor signal to noise ratio can be over-come in several ways, by using 3 dimensional data acquisition rather than 2 dimensional, a better low-noise electronics and fast pulse repetition rate for more signal averaging and multi-echo acquisition. The biochemical properties of sodium, yielding a dramatic contrast changes associated with pathology, also lead to facilitate favorable conditions for clinical imaging compared with proton imaging. The combined use of the advanced imaging techniques and the biochemical properties of sodium can produce clinically useful images. We have demonstrated an additional use of sodium imaging by obtaining simultaneous images of proton and sodium for direct comparison of the two distinctly different but related modalities.
© (1985) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
S . K. Mun, J. B. Ra, S. K. Hilal, S . W. Lee, Z. H. Cho, and I. K. Mun "Physics Of High Resolution Sodium MRI Of The Brain", Proc. SPIE 0555, Medical Imaging and Instrumentation '85, (19 September 1985); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.949474
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KEYWORDS
Sodium

Signal to noise ratio

Tissues

Imaging systems

Head

Magnetic resonance imaging

Electronics

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