Groch M W, Turner D A, Erwin W D
Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois 60612.
Clin Imaging. 1991 Jul-Sep;15(3):196-201. doi: 10.1016/0899-7071(91)90077-9.
Magnetic resonance image quality is adversely affected by respiratory (RESP) motion during the scan. Respiratory gating improves magnetic resonance image (MRI) quality and removes artifacts, but has not been widely used, as RESP gating increases scan time. Our RESP-gating device was used to study scan time versus improvement in image quality using various gating modes; with and without combined electrocardiographic (ECG) gating. When RESP scans were acquired for the same time as non-gated scans, by using a wide RESP-gating window bracketing end expiration and a reduced number of pulse sequence repetitions, substantial improvement in image quality (over non-gated scans) resulted, despite the inferior statistical content of the acquisition.