Systems and methods for accelerated dynamic magnetic resonance imaging
US-9224210-B2 · Dec 29, 2015 · US
US9651643B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9651643-B2 |
| Application number | US-201213593329-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Aug 23, 2012 |
| Priority date | Aug 24, 2011 |
| Publication date | May 16, 2017 |
| Grant date | May 16, 2017 |
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A transmit coil system of a magnetic resonance system is exposed to high-frequency transmit pulses so that atomic nuclei of a predetermined type of atomic nucleus of an examination object introduced into an examination volume are excited by the high-frequency transmit pulses to emit magnetic resonance signals. A gradient magnetic system is exposed to gradient currents during the exposure of the examination volume to the high-frequency transmit pulses so that gradient magnetic fields are superimposed on a basic magnetic field generated by a basic magnet in the examination volume. The gradient currents and the high-frequency transmit pulses are matched to each other such that the atomic nuclei are exclusively those with a velocity lying within or outside a predetermined velocity range. The excitation is independent of variations in the Larmor frequency of the relevant type of atomic nucleus caused by inhomogeneities of the basic magnetic field and/or by chemical displacement.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method for operating a magnetic resonance system, the method comprising: exposing a transmit coil system acting on an examination volume to high-frequency transmit pulses so that atomic nuclei of a predetermined type of atomic nucleus of an examination object introduced into the examination volume are excited by the high-frequency transmit pulses to cause an emission of magnetic resonance signals; exposing a gradient magnetic system acting on the examination volume to a gradient current at a same time as an exposure of the examination volume to a subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses so that gradient magnetic fields are superimposed on a temporally static and locally homogeneous basic magnetic field generated by a basic magnet in the examination volume; and matching the gradient current and the subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses at the same time to each other such that the atomic nuclei excited to cause the emission of magnetic resonance signals are exclusively atomic nuclei with a velocity within a predetermined velocity range, while the excitation is independent of variations in a Larmor frequency of a relevant type of atomic nucleus caused by inhomogeneities of the basic magnetic field, chemical displacement, or the inhomogeneities of the basic magnetic field and the chemical displacement. 2. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the transmit coil system comprises a plurality of transmitting antennas, and wherein exposing the transmit coil system comprises simultaneously exposing the plurality of transmitting antennas to respective high-frequency transmit pulses. 3. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the high-frequency transmit pulses comprise a plurality of temporally successive subpulses with a shape pS ( t )= AS·A 0( t )·sin(2π ft+φS ), and wherein pS is a respective subpulse, t is a time, AS is a factor, A 0 is a uniform basic amplitude curve for all subpulses, f is a frequency, and φS is a phase. 4. The method as claimed in claim 3 , wherein the factor, the frequency, the phase, or a combination thereof is subpulse-specific. 5. The method as claimed in claim 3 , further comprising exposing the gradient magnetic system to gradient currents during the exposure of the examination volume to the subpulses. 6. The method as claimed in claim 5 , further comprising determining the gradient currents, to which the gradient magnetic system is exposed during the exposure of the examination volume to the subpulses, such that the gradient currents generate a time-varying gradient trajectory. 7. The method as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the predetermined velocity range does not encompass velocity zero. 8. The method as claimed in claim 2 , wherein the high-frequency transmit pulses comprise a plurality of temporally successive subpulses with a shape pS ( t )= AS·A 0( t )·sin(2π ft+φS ), and wherein pS is a respective subpulse, t is a time, AS is a factor, A 0 is a uniform basic amplitude curve for all subpulses, f is a frequency, and φS is a phase. 9. The method as claimed in claim 4 , further comprising exposing the gradient magnetic system to gradient currents during the exposure of the examination volume to the subpulses. 10. The method as claimed in claim 2 , wherein the predetermined velocity range does not encompass velocity zero. 11. The method as claimed in claim 3 , wherein the predetermined velocity range does not encompass velocity zero. 12. In a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium that stores instructions executable by a controller for a magnetic resonance system to operate the magnetic resonance system, the instructions comprising: exposing a transmit coil system acting on an examination volume to high-frequency transmit pulses so that atomic nuclei of a predetermined type of atomic nucleus of an examination object introduced into the examination volume are excited by the high-frequency transmit pulses to cause an emission of magnetic resonance signals; exposing a gradient magnetic system acting on the examination volume to a gradient current at a same time as an exposure of the examination volume to a subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses so that gradient magnetic fields are superimposed on a temporally static and locally homogeneous basic magnetic field generated by a basic magnet in the examination volume; and matching the gradient current and the subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses at the same time to each other such that the atomic nuclei excited to cause the emission of magnetic resonance signals are exclusively atomic nuclei with a velocity within a predetermined velocity range, while the excitation is independent of variations in a Larmor frequency of a relevant type of atomic nucleus caused by inhomogeneities of the basic magnetic field, chemical displacement, or the inhomogeneities of the basic magnetic field and the chemical displacement. 13. A controller for a magnetic resonance system, the controller being configured to operate the magnetic resonance system, wherein the controller is further configured to: expose a transmit coil system acting on an examination volume to high-frequency transmit pulses so that atomic nuclei of a predetermined type of atomic nucleus of an examination object introduced into the examination volume are excited by the high-frequency transmit pulses to cause an emission of magnetic resonance signals; expose a gradient magnetic system acting on the examination volume to a gradient current at a same time as an exposure of the examination volume to a subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses so that gradient magnetic fields are superimposed on a temporally static and locally homogeneous basic magnetic field generated by a basic magnet in the examination volume; and match the gradient current and the subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses at the same time to each other such that the atomic nuclei excited to cause the emission of magnetic resonance signals are exclusively the atomic nuclei with a velocity within a predetermined velocity range, while the excitation is independent of variations in a Larmor frequency of a relevant type of atomic nucleus caused by inhomogeneities of the basic magnetic field, chemical displacement, or the inhomogeneities of the basic magnetic field and the chemical displacement. 14. A magnetic resonance system comprising: a transmit coil system operable to act on an examination volume; a gradient magnetic system operable to act on the examination volume; a basic magnet operable to generate a temporally static and locally homogeneous basic magnetic field in the examination volume; and a controller configured to: expose the transmit coil system acting on the examination volume to high-frequency transmit pulses so that atomic nuclei of a predetermined type of atomic nucleus of an examination object introduced into the examination volume are excited by the high-frequency transmit pulses to cause an emission of magnetic resonance signals; expose the gradient magnetic system acting on the examination volume to gradient current at a same time as an exposure of the examination volume to a subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses so that gradient magnetic fields are superimposed on the temporally static and locally homogeneous basic magnetic field generated by the basic magnet in the examination volume; and match the gradient current and the subpulse of the high-frequency transmit pulses at the same time to each other such that the atomic nuclei excited to cause the emission of magnetic resonance signals are exclusively the atomic nucle
Characterization of motion or flow; Dynamic imaging · CPC title
Image enhancement or correction, e.g. subtraction or averaging techniques {, e.g. improvement of signal-to-noise ratio and resolution} · CPC title
involving electronic [EMR] or nuclear [NMR] magnetic resonance, e.g. magnetic resonance imaging · CPC title
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