MRI Physics Ch12
MRI Physics Ch12
Yao Wang Polytechnic University, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Based on J. L. Prince and J. M. Links, Medical Imaging Signals and Systems, and lecture notes by Prince. Figures are from the textbook except otherwise noted.
Lecture Outline
Lecture Outline
Overview of MRI Nuclear spin properties Precession and Larmor Frequency RF excitation Relaxation Contrast mechanism
X-ray projection
MRI
What is Spin?
Spin is a fundamental property of nature like electrical charge or mass. Spin comes in multiples of 1/2 and can be + or -. Protons, electrons, and neutrons possess spin. Individual unpaired electrons, protons, and neutrons each possesses a spin of or - . Two or more particles with spins having opposite signs can pair up to eliminate the observable manifestations of spin. In nuclear magnetic resonance, it is unpaired nuclear spins that are of importance.
Nuclear Spin
A nucleus consists of protons and neutrons When the total number of protons and neutrons (=mass number A) is odd or the total number of protons is odd, a nucleus has an angular momentum (\phi) and hence spin
Ex. Hydrogen (1^H) (1 proton), 13^C
The spin of a nucleus generates a magnetic filed, which has a magnetic moment (\mu) The spin causes the nucleus behave like a tiny magnet with a north and south pole
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Nuclear Magnetization
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Precession
Spins PRECESS at a single frequency (w0), but incoherently they are not in phase, so that the sum of x-y components is 0, with net magnetization vector in z direction W0=\gamma B_0: Larmor freq.
mz
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Irradiating with a rotating magnetic field B_1 of frequency w0, causes spins to precess coherently, or in phase, generating a xycomponent
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Using the right hand rule, M will rotate around z if M is not aligned with z
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= ( M y Bz M z By ) i + ( M z Bx M x Bz ) j + ( M x By M y Bx ) k
Direction of MxB follows right hand rule
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mz
This is the frequency of the photon which would cause a transition between the two energy levels of the spin. B0=1.5T, \gamma=42.58 MHz/T, v0=63.9 MHz
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No change
Rapidly rotating
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y x y x
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NMR Signal
The rapidly rotating transverse magnetization (M_xy) creates a radio frequency excitation within the sample. If we put a coil of wire outside the sample, the RF excitation will induce a voltage signal. In MRI, we measure this voltage signal. Voltage produced is (Faradays Law of Induction)
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Simplification
B^r(r)=B^r
B_1(t) has two orthogonal components, in x and y directions respectively, and is produced by using quadrature RF coil Simplest envelop B_1,e is a rectangular pulse
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B0
S
two more magnets, whose fields are orthogonal to B0, that rotate, in opposite directions, at the Larmor frequency
N
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Tip Angle
If M is parallel to z-axis before the RF excitation pulse, the tip angle after the excitation (with duration \tau_p) is
If B_1^e(t) is rectangular
Pulse that leads to \alpha=\pi/2 is called \pi over 2 pulse, which elicits the largest transverse component M_xy, and hence largest NMR signal Pulse that leads to \alpha=\pi is called \pi pulse or inverse pulse, which is used to induce spin echo (later) The excitation pulse (envelop of B_1(t)) is also called an alpha pulse
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Relaxation
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Longitudinal Relaxation
The magnetization vectors tend to return to equilibrium state (parallel to B_0)
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In the laboratory frame, M takes a spiralling path back to its equilibrium orientation. But here in the rotating frame, it simply rotates in the y-z plane.
B0
Mz
M y
The z component of M, Mz, grows back into its equlibrium value, exponentially: Mz = |M|(1 - e-t/T1)
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Transverse Relaxation
The strength of the magnetic field in the immediate environment of a 1H nucleus is not homogeneous due to presence of other nucleus (and their interactions) Hence the Larmor frequencies of nearby nuclides are slightly different (some spins faster, some slower)
Spin-spin interactions
This causes dephasing of the xy components of the magnetization vectors, leading to exponential decay of M_xy
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T_2 is called transverse relaxation time, which is the time for M_xy to decrease by 1/e. Also called spin-spin relaxation time T2 is much smaller than T1
For tissue in body, T2: 25-250ms, T1: 250-2500 ms
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This is called free induction decay (FID), and is the signal we measure in MRI
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T2 Star Decay
Received signal actually decays faster than T_2 (having a shorter relaxation time T_2^*) Caused by fixed spatial variation of the static field B_0 due to imperfection of the magnet
Accelerates the dephasing of magnetization vectors Note that T2 is caused by spatial variation of the static field due to interactions of nearby spins
The initial decay rate is governed by T_2^* , but the later decay by T_2.
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Bloch Equations
Relaxation
Static field
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Solving the previous equation in x, y, z direction will yield the equations representing the transverse and longitudinal relaxations, shown previously
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Source of MR Contrast
Different tissues vary in T1, T2 and PD (proton density) The pulse sequence parameters can be designed so that the captured signal magnitude is mainly influenced by one of these parameters Pulse sequence parameters
Tip angle \alpha Echo time T_E Pulse repetition time T_R
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White matter
CSF
PD weighted
T2- weighted
T1- weighted
Gray matter
T1-weighting
Short TR:
Maximizes T1 contrast due to different degrees of saturation If TR too long, tissues with different T1 all return equilibrium already
Short TE:
Minimizes T2 influence, maximizes signal
T1 T2
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Short TE:
Minimizes T2 contrast Maximizes signal
T2 T1
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T2 weighting
Long TR:
Minimizes influence of different T1
Long TE:
Maximizes T2 contrast Relatively poor SNR
T2
T1
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Summary
What is nuclear spin? What type of nucleus can have spin? What is the bulk magnetization vector in the absence of external magnetic field? What is the bulk magnetization vector in the presence of an external static magnetic field? What is precession? Under what condition will precession occur?
Static field, initial angle Larmor frequency = \gamma B_0
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Reference
Prince and Links, Medical Imaging Signals and Systems, Chap. 12 A. Webb, Introduction to Biomedical Imaging, Chap. 4 The Basics of MRI, A web book by Joseph P. Horn (containing useful animation): http://www.cis.rit.edu/htbooks/mri/inside.htm
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Homework
Reading:
Prince and Links, Medical Imaging Signals and Systems, Chap. 12 Note down all the corrections for Ch. 10,11 on your copy of the textbook based on the provided errata (see Course website or book website for update).
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