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Elimination of transverse coherences in FLASH MRI
Author(s) -
Crawley Adrian P.,
Wood Michael L.,
Henkelman R. Mark
Publication year - 1988
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.1910080303
Subject(s) - flash (photography) , phase (matter) , transverse plane , physics , optics , amplitude , pulse (music) , nuclear magnetic resonance , quality (philosophy) , image quality , computer science , field (mathematics) , encode , image (mathematics) , artificial intelligence , mathematics , chemistry , quantum mechanics , biochemistry , structural engineering , detector , pure mathematics , gene , engineering
Fast low‐angle shot (FLASH) imaging enables TI‐weighted scans to be acquired in a few seconds. However, the diagnostic image quality is severely compromised by the appearance of artifactual bands parallel to the frequency encode direction. We show that the band structure arises from differences in the ability of the phase encode gradient to spoil transverse coherences that build up between successive repetition intervals. A theoretical understanding of the mechanisms involved leads to a comparison between various methods of spoiling the unwanted echoes throughout the whole field of view. Spoiler gradients whose amplitudes change linearly with phase encode step number are treated in detail. The theory predicts that the spoilers will rotate and rescale the band structure and these results are confirmed experimentally. The effect of the spoilers at a given location along the gradient is equivalent to the effect on the entire field of view of an incremented phase shift applied to the radiofrequency pulse. An appropriate rf phase shift scheme should therefore provide ideal spoiling characteristics for FLASH imaging. © 1988 Academic Press, Inc.
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