What are the goals of imaging?
List 3 brain imaging techniques.
What kind of electromagnetic waves does MRI use? Is the wavelength larger or smaller than x ray?
radio; larger than x-ray
What are the pros of MRI?
What are the cons of MRI?
What basic concept in chemistry did MRI evolve from?
NMR
What does NMR measure?
intrinsic molecules in the body
What does NMR stand for?
TRUE or FALSE: atomic number is the number of protons+ neutrons; mass number is the number of protons
FALSE:
- atomic number = # protons
- mass number = # protons + neutrons
A nucleus yields a magnetic moment unless the number of each nucleon type is _____________.
even
What exactly is imaged in MRI? Based on this, what does MRI detect?
protons of the hydrogen atom in water; detect change in magnetic properties of the proton
TRUE or FALSE: water has constant properties in various tissues, which makes it useful in MRI.
FALSE: water has DIFFERENT properties in various tissues, which makes it useful in MRI
Describe how MRI gives us tissue contrast.
When is blood flow considered paramagnetic? diamagnetic?
What does the signal intensity of each voxel represent?
macroscopic average of the water properties in each compartment within the tissue (i.e. activity of H2O molecules)
TRUE or FALSE: one water molecule fits into one voxel
FALSE: many water molecules can fit into 1 voxel
How big is a single voxel?
1mm x 1mm
How thick are slices in MRI scans?
~ 1-5 mm thick
What does the radiofrequency (RF) coil do in MRI?
excites and detects the H signal from the tissue
What are the main hardware components of an MRI scanner?
How is a static magnetic field (Bo) created in MRI? What does it do?
What are MRI scanners characterized by?
strength of their magnetic field
How strong is the magnetic field in a:
- normal clinical scanner
- our strongest scanner
- Earth’s magnetic field
What is the function of longitudinal magnetization (Mo) in MRI?
prepare the signal for transmission, by aligning the protons