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MRI Image Formation

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Title: No Slide Title Author: Peter Jezzard Last modified by: Allen D. Elster Created Date: 4/22/1999 2:42:53 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MRI Image Formation


1
MRI Image Formation
Karla Miller FMRIB Physics Group
2
Image Formation
  • Gradients and spatial encoding
  • Sampling k-space
  • Trajectories and acquisition strategies
  • Fast imaging
  • Acquiring multiple slices
  • Image reconstruction and artifacts

3
MR imaging is based on precession
z
y
x
courtesy William Overall
  • Spins precess at the Larmor rate
  • g (B0 DB)

4
Magnetic Gradients
  • Gradient Additional magnetic field which varies
    over space
  • Gradient adds to B0, so field depends on position
  • Precessional frequency varies with position!
  • Pulse sequence modulates size of gradient

5
Magnetic Gradients
  • Spins at each position sing at different
    frequency
  • RF coil hears all of the spins at once
  • Differentiate material at a given position by
    selectively listening to that frequency

Fast precession
Slow precession
6
Simple imaging experiment (1D)
increasing field
7
Simple imaging experiment (1D)
Signal
Fourier transform
Image
position
Fourier Transform determines amount of material
at a given location by selectively listening to
the corresponding frequency
8
2D Imaging via 2D Fourier Transform
9
Analogy Weather Mapping
10
2D Fourier Transform
2DFT
Measured signal (frequency-, or k-space)
Reconstructed image
FT can be applied in any number of
dimensions MRI signal acquired in 2D frequency
space (k-space) (Usually) reconstruct image with
2DFT
11
Gradients and image acquisition
  • Magnetic field gradients encode spatial position
    in precession frequency
  • Signal is acquired in the frequency domain
    (k-space)
  • To get an image, acquire spatial frequencies
    along both x and y
  • Image is recovered from k-space data using a
    Fourier transform

12
Image Formation
  • Gradients and spatial encoding
  • Sampling k-space
  • Trajectories and acquisition strategies
  • Fast imaging
  • Acquiring multiple slices
  • Image reconstruction and artifacts

13
Sampling k-space
Perfect reconstruction of an object would require
measurement of all locations in k-space
(infinite!) Data is acquired point-by-point in
k-space (sampling)
14
Sampling k-space
  1. What is the highest frequency we need to sample
    in k-space (kmax)?
  2. How close should the samples be in k-space (Dk)?

15
Frequency spectrum
What is the maximum frequency we need to
measure? Or, what is the maximum k-space value
we must sample (kmax)?
FT
kmax
-kmax
16
Frequency spectrum
17
Frequency spectrum
18
Frequency spectrum
19
Frequency spectrum
20
Frequency spectrum
21
Frequency spectrum
Higher frequencies make the reconstruction look
more like the original object! Large kmax
increases resolution (allows us to distinguish
smaller features)
22
2D Extension
increasing kmax
kymax
kxmax
?kxmax
?kymax
2 kxmax
kmax determines image resolution Large kmax
means high resolution !
23
Sampling k-space
  1. What is the highest frequency we need to sample
    in k-space (kmax)?
  2. How close should the samples be in k-space (Dk)?

24
Nyquist Sampling Theorem
A given frequency must be sampled at least twice
per cycle in order to reproduce it accurately
1 samp/cyc
2 samp/cyc
Upper waveform is resolved!
Cannot distinguish between waveforms
25
Nyquist Sampling Theorem
Insufficient sampling forces us to interpret that
both samples are at the same location aliasing
26
Aliasing (ghosting) inability to differentiate
between 2 frequencies makes them appear to be at
same location
x
x
Aliased image
Applied FOV
max ?ive frequency
max ?ive frequency
27
k-space relationsFOV and Resolution
28
k-space relationsFOV and Resolution
k-space and image-space are inversely related
resolution in one domain determines extent in
other
29
k-space
Image
Full-FOV, high-res
Full sampling
2DFT
Full-FOV, low-res blurred
Reduce kmax
Low-FOV, high-res may be aliased
Increase ?k
30
Image Formation
  • Gradients and spatial encoding
  • Sampling k-space
  • Trajectories and acquisition strategies
  • Fast imaging
  • Acquiring multiple slices
  • Image reconstruction and artifacts

31
Visualizing k-space trajectories
kx(t) ? ?Gx(t) dt ky(t) ? ?Gy(t) dt
k-space location is proportional to accumulated
area under gradient waveforms Gradients move us
along a trajectory through k-space !
32
Raster-scan (2DFT) Acquisition
Acquire k-space line-by-line (usually called
2DFT) Gx causes frequency shift along x
frequency encode axis Gy causes phase shift
along y phase ecode axis
33
Echo-planar Imaging (EPI) Acquisition
Single-shot (snap-shot) acquire all data at once
34
Many possible trajectories through k-space
35
Trajectory considerations
  • Longer readout more image artifacts
  • Single-shot (EPI spiral) warping or blurring
  • PR 2DFT have very short readouts and few
    artifacts
  • Cartesian (2DFT, EPI) vs radial (PR, spiral)
  • 2DFT EPI ghosting warping artifacts
  • PR spiral blurring artifacts
  • SNR for N shots with time per shot Tread

36
Image Formation
  • Gradients and spatial encoding
  • Sampling k-space
  • Trajectories and acquisition strategies
  • Fast imaging
  • Acquiring multiple slices
  • Image reconstruction and artifacts

37
Partial k-space
If object is entirely real, quadrants of k-space
contain redundant information
2
1
aib
cid
a?ib
c?id
ky
3
4
kx
38
Partial k-space
Idea just acquire half of k-space and fill in
missing data Symmetry isnt perfect, so must get
slightly more than half
1
aib
cid
measured data
a?ib
c?id
missing data
ky
kx
39
Multiple approaches
Reduced phase encode steps
Acquire half of each frequency encode
40
Parallel imaging(SENSE, SMASH, GRAPPA, iPAT, etc)
Surface coils
Object in 8-channel array
Single coil sensitivity
Multi-channel coils Array of RF receive
coils Each coil is sensitive to a subset of the
object
41
Parallel imaging(SENSE, SMASH, GRAPPA, iPAT, etc)
Surface coils
Object in 8-channel array
Single coil sensitivity
Coil sensitivity to encode additional
information Can leave out large parts of
k-space (more than 1/2!) Similar uses to partial
k-space (faster imaging, reduced distortion,
etc), but can go farther
42
Image Formation
  • Gradients and spatial encoding
  • Sampling k-space
  • Trajectories and acquisition strategies
  • Fast imaging
  • Acquiring multiple slices
  • Image reconstruction and artifacts

43
Slice Selection
RF
frequency
?0
gradient
Gz
excited slice
44
2D Multi-slice Imaging
excited slice
All slices excited and acquired sequentially
(separately) Most scans acquired this way
(including FMRI, DTI)
45
True 3D imaging
excited volume
Repeatedly excite all slices simultaneously,
k-space acquisition extended from 2D to 3D
Higher SNR than multi-slice, but may take
longer Typically used in structural scans
46
Image Formation
  • Gradients and spatial encoding
  • Sampling k-space
  • Trajectories and acquisition strategies
  • Fast imaging
  • Acquiring multiple slices
  • Image reconstruction and artifacts

47
Motion Artifacts
PE
  • Motion causes inconsistencies between readouts in
    multi-shot data (structurals)
  • Usually looks like replication of object edges
    along phase encode direction

48
Gibbs Ringing (Truncation)
  • Abruptly truncating signal in k-space introduces
    ringing to the image

49
EPI distortion (warping)
field offset
image distortion
Field map
EPI image (uncorrected)
Magnetization precesses at a different rate than
expected Reconstruction places the signal at the
wrong location
50
EPI unwarping (FUGUE)
field map
uncorrected
corrected
Field map tells us where there are
problems Estimate distortion from field map and
remove it
51
EPI Trajectory Errors
Left-to-right lines offset from right-to-left
lines Many causes timing errors, eddy currents
52
EPI Ghosting
Shifted trajectory is sum of 2 shifted
undersampled trajectories Causes aliasing
(ghosting) To fix measure shifts with
reference scan, shift back in reconstruction
53
Image Formation Tutorial
  • Matlab exercises (self-contained, simple!)
  • k-space sampling (FOV, resolution)
  • k-space trajectories
  • Get file from FMRIB network
  • http//www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/karla/misc/imageform.tar
  • Instructions in PDF
  • Go through on your own (or in pairs), well
    discuss on Thursday
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