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Principles of MRI Physics and Engineering

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1 Principles of MRI Physics and Engineering
Allen W. Song Brain Imaging and Analysis Center Duke University

2 Magnetic resonance imaging, commonly known as
MRI, can non-invasively provide high resolution anatomical images of human structures, such as brain, heart and other soft tissues. It is used routinely in clinical diagnosis. Functional MRI advances from the traditional static scans to image dynamic time course of the brain signal during specific tasks. It is widely used now in studying the working mechanism of the human brain. Clinical application is mainly seen in presurgical planning.

3 MRI  Cool (and Useful) Pictures
axial coronal sagittal 2D slices extracted from a 3D image [resolution about 111 mm]

4 Synopsis of MRI 1) Put subject in big magnetic field
2) Transmit radio waves into subject [2~10 ms] 3) Turn off radio wave transmitter 4) Receive radio waves re-transmitted by subject Manipulate re-transmission with magnetic fields during this readout interval [ ms: MRI is not a snapshot] 5) Store measured radio wave data vs. time Now go back to 2) to get some more data 6) Process raw data to reconstruct images 7) Allow subject to leave scanner

5 Lecture Components I) Magnetic fields and magnetization,
fundamental ideas about NMR signal II) How to make an image, introduction to k-space III) MRI contrast mechanisms, various imaging techniques

6 And Magnetization, Fundamental of NMR Signal
Part I Magnetic Fields And Magnetization, Fundamental of NMR Signal

7 Magnetic Fields, Magnetization,
NMR Signal Generation

8 rf coil main magnet gradient Shimming Control Computer Receive
Transmit Receive rf coil main magnet gradient Shimming Control Computer

9 Things needed for a typical MRI scanner
Strong magnetic field, usually from superconducting magnets. RadioFrequency coils and sub-system. Gradient coils and sub-system. Shimming coils and sub-system. Computer(s) that coordinate all sub-systems.

10 Magnetic and Electromagnetic Fields
Magnetic fields generate the substance we “see”: magnetization of the H protons in H2O Magnetic fields also let us manipulate magnetization so that we can make a map [or image] of its distribution inside the body’s tissue Static magnetic fields change slowly (< 0.1 ppm / hr): main field; static inhomogeneities Gradient magnetic fields change quickly (switching up to thousands of times per second): RF fields are electromagnetic fields that oscillate at Radio Frequencies (tens of millions of times per second) transmitted radio waves into subject received signals from subject

11 Vectors and Fields Magnetic field B and magnetization M are vectors:
Quantities with direction as well as size Drawn as arrows Another example: velocity is a vector (speed is its size) Magnetic field exerts torque to line magnets up in a given direction direction of alignment is direction of B torque proportional to size of B [units=Tesla, Gauss=10–4 T]

12 Main Magnet Field Bo Purpose is to align H protons in H2O (little magnets) [Main magnet and some of its lines of force] [Little magnets lining up with external lines of force]

13 Common nuclei with NMR property
Criteria: Must have ODD number of protons or ODD number of neutrons. Reason? It is impossible to arrange these nuclei so that a zero net angular momentum is achieved. Thus, these nuclei will display a magnetic moment and angular momentum necessary for NMR. Examples: 1H, 13C, 19F, 23N, and 31P with gyromagnetic ratio of 42.58, 10.71, 40.08, and MHz/T. Since hydrogen protons are the most abundant in human body, we use 1H MRI most of the time.

14 A Single Proton m There is electric charge
on the surface of the proton, thus creating a small current loop and generating magnetic moment m. The proton also has mass which generates an angular momentum J when it is spinning. J + + + m = g J where g is the gyromagnetic ratio Thus proton “magnet” differs from the magnetic bar in that it also possesses angular momentum caused by spinning.

15 Similarity between a spinning proton and a spinning magnetic bar
+ + + + + + + S

16 Protons in Free Space What happens if they are in a magnetic field ?

17 Magnetic Bar in a Magnetic Field
Bo N S S Static magnetic bar Spinning magnetic bar

18 Protons in a Magnetic Field
Bo Parallel (low energy) Anti-Parallel (high energy) Spinning protons in a magnetic field will assume two states. If the temperature is 0o K, all spins will occupy the lower energy state.

19 Net Magnetization Bo M

20 Small B0 produces small net magnetization M
Basic Quantum Mechanics Theory of MR Small B0 produces small net magnetization M Thermal motions try to randomize alignment of proton magnets Larger B0 produces larger net magnetization M, lined up with B0 At room temperature, the population ratio is roughly 100,000 to 100,006 per Tesla of B0

21 The Energy Difference Between
Basic Quantum Mechanics Theory of MR The Energy Difference Between the Two States D E = h n where n = g Bo / 2p, known as larmor frequency g = MHz / Tesla

22 Knowing the energy difference allows us to use
Basic Quantum Mechanics Theory of MR Knowing the energy difference allows us to use electromagnetic waves with appropriate energy level to irradiate the spin system so that some spins at lower energy level can absorb right amount of energy to “flip” to higher energy level.

23 Spin System Before Irradiation
Basic Quantum Mechanics Theory of MR Spin System Before Irradiation Bo Lower Energy Higher Energy

24 The Effect of Irradiation to the Spin System
Basic Quantum Mechanics Theory of MR The Effect of Irradiation to the Spin System Lower Higher

25 Spin System After Irradiation
Basic Quantum Mechanics Theory of MR Spin System After Irradiation

26 Precession of Magnetization M
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR Precession of Magnetization M Magnetic field causes M to rotate (or precess) about the direction of Bo at a frequency proportional to the size of Bo — 42 million times per second (42 MHz), per Tesla of Bo. To visualize the rotation, the magnetization M is tipped away from the Bo direction. Bo If M is not parallel to B, then it precesses clockwise around the direction of B. However, “normal” (fully relaxed) situation has M parallel to B, which means there won’t be any precession N.B.: part of M parallel to Bo (Mz) does not precess

27 Classical Mechanics Theory of MR
A Mechanical Analogy A gyroscope in the Earth’s gravitational field is like magnetization in an externally applied magnetic field

28 How to Make M not be Parallel to B?
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR How to Make M not be Parallel to B? A way that does not work: Turn on a second big magnetic field B1 perpendicular to main B0 (for a few seconds) Then turn B1 off; M is now not parallel to magnetic field B0 This fails because cannot turn huge (Tesla) magnetic fields on and off quickly But it contains the kernel of the necessary idea: A magnetic field B1 perpendicular to B0 B1 B0+B1 B0 M would drift over to be aligned with sum of B0 and B1

29 RF Coil: Transmitting B1 Field
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR RF Coil: Transmitting B1 Field Left alone, M will align itself with Bo in about 2–3 s So don’t leave it alone: apply (transmit) a magnetic field B1 that fluctuates at the precession frequency and points perpendicular to B0 (how do we achieve this? – by making a coil) The effect of the tiny B1 is to cause M to spiral away from the direction of the static B field B110–4 Tesla This is called resonance If B1 frequency is not close to resonance, B1 has no effect Time = 2–4 ms

30 Another Mechanical Analogy: A Swingset
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR Another Mechanical Analogy: A Swingset Person sitting on swing at rest is “aligned” with externally imposed force field (gravity) To get the person up high, you could simply supply enough force to overcome gravity and lift him (and the swing) up Analogous to forcing M over by turning on a huge static B1 The other way is to push back and forth with a tiny force, synchronously with the natural oscillations of the swing Analogous to using the tiny RF B1 to slowly flip M over g

31 Rotating Frame (compared to Laboratory Frame)
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR Rotating Frame (compared to Laboratory Frame) w Rotating Frame Laboratory Frame

32 Spin Excitation using Rotating Frames Reference
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR Spin Excitation using Rotating Frames Reference M q = g B1 t B1 M q Notice the disappearance of the Bo term in rotating frame

33 What if the RF field is not synchronized?
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR What if the RF field is not synchronized? Using the swingset example: now the driving force is no longer synchronized with the swing frequency, thus the efficiency of driving the swing is less. In a real spin system, there is a term called “effective B1 field”, given by B1eff = B1 + Dw/g where Dw = wo – we Dw/g B1eff B1

34 RF Coil: Signal Receiver
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR RF Coil: Signal Receiver When excitation RF is turned off, M is left pointed off at some angle to B0 [flip angle] Precessing part of M [Mxy] is like having a magnet rotating around at very high speed (at RF frequencies) Will generate an oscillating voltage in a coil of wires placed around the subject — this is magnetic induction

35 RF Coil: Signal Receiver
Classical Mechanics Theory of MR RF Coil: Signal Receiver This voltage is the RF signal whose measurements form the raw data for MRI At each instant in time, can measure one voltage V(t), which is proportional to the sum of all transverse Mxy inside the coil Must find a way to separate signals from different regions

36 Various RF Coils Separated by function:
Transmit / receive coil (most common) Transmit only coil (can only excite the system) Receive only coil (can only receive MR signal) Separated by geometry Volume coil (low sensitivity but uniform coverage) Surface coil (High sensitivity but limited coverage)

37 Gradient Coils: Spatially Nonuniform B:
Extra static magnetic fields (in addition to B0) that vary their intensity in a linear way across the subject Precession frequency of M varies across subject Center frequency [63 MHz at 1.5 T] f 60 KHz Gx = 1 Gauss/cm = 10 mTesla/m = strength of gradient field x-axis Left = –7 cm Right = +7 cm

38 A 3-D gradient field (dB/dx, dB/dy, dB/dz) would
allow a unique correspondence between the spatial location and the magnetic field. Using this information, we will be able to generate maps that contain spatial information – images.

39 Gradient Coils Gradient coils generate varying magnetic field so that
z z z y y y x x x X gradient Y gradient Z gradient Gradient coils generate varying magnetic field so that spins at different location precess at frequencies unique to their location, allowing us to reconstruct 2D or 3D images.

40 Spatial Encoding – along x

41 Spatial Encoding of the MR Signal
0.8 Spatial Encoding of the MR Signal Constant Magnetic Field Varying Magnetic Field w/o encoding w/ encoding

42 Spatial Encoding of the MR Signal
Fourier Transform

43 Spatial Encoding – along y

44 Relaxation Characteristics
About the NMR Signal

45 Relaxation: Nothing Lasts Forever
In absence of external B1, M will go back to being aligned with static field B0 — this is called relaxation Part of M perpendicular to B0 shrinks [Mxy] This part of M is called transverse magnetization It provides the detectable RF signal Part of M parallel to B0 grows back [Mz] This part of M is called longitudinal magnetization Not directly detectable, but is converted into transverse magnetization by externally applied B1

46 Relaxation Times and Rates
Times: ‘T’ in exponential laws like e–t/T Rates: R = 1/T [so have relaxation like e–Rt] T1: Relaxation of M back to alignment with B0 Usually ms in the brain [lengthens with bigger B0] T2: Intrinsic decay of the transverse magnetization over a microscopic region ( 5-10 micron size) Usually ms in the brain [shortens with bigger B0] T2*: Overall decay of the observable RF signal over a macroscopic region (millimeter size) Usually about half of T2 in the brain [i.e., faster relaxation]

47 T2* Relaxation S = So * e –t/T2*

48 Material Induced Inhomogeneities Will Affect T2*
Adding a nonuniform object (like a person) to B0 will make the total magnetic field B nonuniform This is due to susceptibility: generation of extra magnetic fields in materials that are immersed in an external field Diamagnetic materials produce negative B fields Paramagnetic materials produce positive B fields Size about 10–7B0 = 1–10 Hz change in precession f Which makes the precession frequency nonuniform, affecting the image intensity and quality For large scale (10+ cm) inhomogeneities, scanner-supplied nonuniform magnetic fields can be adjusted to “even out” the ripples in B — this is called shimming Nonuniformities in B bigger than voxel size affect whole image Nonuniformities in B smaller than voxel size affect voxel “brightness”

49 Frequency and Phase RF signals from different regions that are at different frequencies will get out of phase and thus tend to cancel out Phase = the t in cos(t) [frequency f = /2]

50 Sum of 500 Cosines with Random Frequencies
Starts off large when all phases are about equal Decays away as different components get different phases High frequency gray curve is at the average frequency

51 T2* relaxation (decay) and NMR Signal
Random frequency differences inside intricate tissue environment cause RF signals (from Mxy) to dephase Measurement = sum of RF signals from many places Measured signal decays away over time [T2*40 ms at 1.5 T] At a microscopic level (microns), Mxy signals still exist; they just add up to zero when observed from outside (at the RF coil) Contents of tissue can affect local magnetic field Signal decay rate depends on tissue structure and material Measured signal strength will depend on tissue details If tissue contents change, NMR signal will change e.g., oxygen level in blood affects signal strength

52 Hahn Spin Echo: Retrieving Lost Signal
Problem: Mxy rotates at different rates in different spots Solution: take all the Mxy’s that are ahead and make them get behind (in phase) the slow ones After a while, fast ones catch up to slow ones  re-phased! Fast & slow runners Magically “beam” runners across track Let them run the same time as before

53 The “magic” trick: Flip of the magnetization M
Apply a second B1 pulse to produce a flip angle of 180 about the y-axis (say) Time between first and second B1 pulses is called TE/2 “Echo” occurs at time TE

54 Spin Echo:  Excite  Precess  180 flip  Precess & dephase
& rephase

55 T2 Relaxation (Decay) Spin echo doesn’t work forever (TE can’t be too big) Main reason: water molecules diffuse around randomly About 5-10 microns during ms readout window They “see” different magnetic fields and so their precession frequency changes from fast to slow to fast to This process cannot be reversed by the inversion RF pulse Time scale for irreversible decay of Mxy is called T2 S = So * e-t/T2

56 T1 Relaxation Longitudinal relaxation of Mz back to “normal” (T1)
Caused by internal RF magnetic fields in matter Thermal agitation of H2O molecules Can be enhanced by magnetic impurities in tissue S = So (1-et/T1)

57 Proton Density Weighted Image

58 T1 Weighted Image

59 T2 Weighted Image

60 Factors Influencing Relaxation Rates
Magnetic impurities * In general, it will shorten the relaxation time such as T2*, T2 and T1 Local physiological and chemical environment changes * For example, bounded water molecules will have shorter T2 then free water molecules Strength of the magnetic fields * Usually stronger field prolongs T1, however, shortens T2* and T2 due to increased susceptibility-induced magnetic inhomogeneities

61 Contrast Agents that Affects Relaxation Rate
Drugs containing certain impurities can alter T1, T2, and T2* — contrast agents (e.g., CuSO4, Gd-DTPA)


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