Xu Yingbiao, Haacke E Mark
Department of Radiology, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202, USA.
Magn Reson Imaging. 2006 Feb;24(2):155-60. doi: 10.1016/j.mri.2005.10.030. Epub 2005 Dec 27.
Susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI) uses apparent phase contrast to enhance the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) in the magnitude image. In theory, the apparent phase will depend on the aspect ratio when both venous blood and parenchyma occupy the same voxel. To demonstrate the maximal expected effect of the external field from a vein, we model the vein as an infinitely long cylinder perpendicular to the main magnetic field. The results show that the apparent phase of a voxel in the image is a function of resolution, vessel size and, to a lesser degree, vessel center within the voxel. The simulations explain why a negative-phase mask has worked in SWI processing of high-resolution images collected in the transverse direction, despite the expected positive-phase behavior for vessels perpendicular to the main field. The predicted phase behavior from the simulations is in good agreement with that observed from human brain datasets.
susceptibility加权成像(SWI)利用表观相位对比来提高幅度图像中的对比度噪声比(CNR)。理论上,当静脉血和实质占据相同体素时,表观相位将取决于纵横比。为了证明来自静脉的外场的最大预期效应,我们将静脉建模为垂直于主磁场的无限长圆柱体。结果表明,图像中体素的表观相位是分辨率、血管大小以及在较小程度上是体素内血管中心的函数。这些模拟解释了为什么尽管垂直于主磁场的血管预期具有正相位行为,但负相位掩膜在横向采集的高分辨率图像的SWI处理中仍然有效。模拟预测的相位行为与从人脑数据集观察到的结果高度一致。