Saturation Flashcards

1
Q

What is saturation?

A

when the spins are completely in transverse plane and have no longitudinal component left.

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2
Q

How can saturation be achieved?

A

by exposing the spins to fast repeating RF pulses (and de-phasing gradient)

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3
Q

True or false. A saturation sequence starts with a saturation pulse, then 90 RF, then 180 RF, and ends with no echo

A

True

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4
Q

True or false. Saturation exists only briefly.

A

True. Net magnetization recovers (longitudinal relaxation) immediately after protons are “saturated”

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5
Q

What are the types of saturation?

A

spatial and chemical (water & fat)

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6
Q

What is spatial saturation?

A

The application of an RF pulse immediately prior to the imaging sequence saturates all the protons under the influence of that pulse (so that slice has no signal)

The pulse is slice selective

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7
Q

What are the advantages of spatial saturation?

A
  • Reduce motion artifacts in the phase encoding direction (swallowing, CSF pulsation, respiratory motion)
  • Reduce signal from flowing blood
  • Facilitate angiography/venography
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8
Q

What are some disadvantages of spatial saturation?

A
  • Higher SAR (strong RF pulse)
  • Drop in overall SNR (because you’re killing the signal)
  • Fewer slices per TR (timing of saturation pulse prolongs effective TR interval
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9
Q

What is chemical saturation?

A

similar to spatial saturation; narrow band RF pulse causes selective saturation of water or fat protons

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10
Q

What is the order of a fat saturation (fat sat) sequence?

A

Fat sat pulse, 90 RF, 180 RF, and echo from water only

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11
Q

Why is the echo smaller in a fat sat?

A

because of the overall SNR drop

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12
Q

A Fat Sat gives better visualization of ___.

A

fluid

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13
Q

What are the advantages of a fat sat?

A
  • Increases conspicuity of fluid on T2 weighted images (widens dynamic range)
  • Post-gadolinium T1 weighted is best with fat sat
  • Reduced respiratory motion artifact
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14
Q

What are some disadvantages/limitations of a fat sat?

A
  • Fewer slices per TR (timing of saturation pulse prolongs effective TR interval)
  • Higher SAR
  • Lower SNR
  • Requires homogenous magnet (good shimming; not good at FOV > 30 cm^2)
  • Requres uniformly shaped body part (doesn’t work well at base of neck, crook of ankle, etc.)
  • Works poorly at lower fields
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14
Q

The failure of a fat sat could be due to:

A
  • body shape at the imaging area
  • location at the bore (center or side)
  • metallic objects close to area of imaging
  • type of fat sat used
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15
Q

What can be done if there is a fat sat failure?

A
  • reposition the body part
  • rerun with better shimming
  • use sat band (on metals or are with hgih susceptibility issue)
  • use different saturation system
16
Q

What happens during fat suppression?

A

Fat supression reduces total signal by suppression of fat from the voxel; therefore reduces the SNR

17
Q

What is water excitation?

A

This mean that you tune the RF very narrowly to only flip the water signal; resulting in an image where the fat signal is weak and hence looks like a fat sat image

used on 3D gradient echoes for post contrast imaging