Maintaining Consistent Photodetector Sensitivity in an Optical Measurement System
US-2024032798-A1 · Feb 1, 2024 · US
US9662017B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9662017-B2 |
| Application number | US-201414242924-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Apr 2, 2014 |
| Priority date | Apr 2, 2014 |
| Publication date | May 30, 2017 |
| Grant date | May 30, 2017 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A method for operating a Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging system including generating radio frequency (RF) excitation pulses in a volume of patient anatomy that includes a patient's heart to provide subsequent acquisition of associated RF echo data and generating slice select magnetic field gradients for phase encoding and readout RF data acquisition in the volume of patient anatomy. The method also includes acquiring a plurality of slices of an image of the volume of patient anatomy within a plurality of cycles representing time period between successive beats of the patient's heart. The method also includes causing, by a control processor, accelerated acquisition of two or more slices of the plurality of slices within a quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles. The method further includes applying, by the control processor, one or more saturation areas proximate to a target volume of the patient anatomy.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method for operating a Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging system, the method comprising: generating radio frequency (RF) excitation pulses in a volume of patient anatomy comprising a patient's heart to provide subsequent acquisition of associated RF echo data; generating slice select magnetic field gradients for phase encoding and readout RF data acquisition in the volume of patient anatomy; acquiring a plurality of slices of an image of the volume of patient anatomy within a plurality of cycles, each of the plurality of cycles representing time period between successive beats of the patient's heart; causing, by a control processor, accelerated acquisition of two or more slices of the plurality of slices within a quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles; applying, by the control processor, one or more saturation areas proximate to a target volume of the patient anatomy; and wherein causing accelerated acquisition of the two or more slices within the quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles further comprises under-sampling the two or more acquired slices. 2. The method according to claim 1 , wherein the target volume of the patient anatomy is the patient's heart. 3. The method according to claim 1 , further comprising: performing a pre-scan of the volume of patient anatomy prior to acquiring the plurality of slices of an image; using data from the pre-scan to determine positions of the one or more saturation areas proximate to target volume of the patient anatomy; and acquiring the two or more slices of the image having the one or more saturation areas at the determined positions. 4. The method according to claim 3 , further comprising: determining the positions of the one or more saturation areas by detecting a boundary of the target volume of the patient anatomy in the pre-scan; and positioning the one or more saturation areas at the edge of the detected boundary of the target volume of the patient anatomy. 5. The method according to claim 4 , wherein detecting the boundary of the target volume of the patient anatomy further comprises: analyzing pixel intensity distribution across the image of the pre-scan; and determining whether the pixel intensity of the target volume of the patient anatomy and the pixel intensity of the volume of patient anatomy proximate to the target volume of the patient anatomy is equal to or within a predetermined pixel intensity threshold. 6. The method according to claim 1 , further comprising interleaving the plurality of slices of the image acquired within the quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles. 7. The method according to claim 6 , wherein interleaving the plurality of slices comprises acquiring the slices with similar intensity levels consecutively within the quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles. 8. The method according to claim 6 , wherein, N number of slices are acquired within the plurality of cycles; n number of slices are acquired within the quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles; and the plurality of slices are acquired within the quiescent phase of each kth cycle in the order of k, (k+N/n), (k+2*N/n). 9. A multi-slice, magnetic resonance (MR) imaging system, comprising: radio frequency (RF) signal generator configured to generate RF excitation pulses in a volume of patient anatomy comprising a patient's heart and enabling subsequent acquisition of associated RF echo data; a magnetic field gradient generator configured to generate slice select magnetic field gradients for phase encoding and readout RF data acquisition in the volume of patient anatomy; a plurality of RF coils configured to acquire a plurality of slices of an image of the volume of patient anatomy within a plurality of cycles, each of the plurality of cycles representing time period between successive beats of the patient's heart; a controller configured to cause: (i) the plurality of RF coils to acquire two or more of the plurality of slices within a quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles; and (ii) one or more saturation areas to be applied proximate to a target volume of the patient anatomy; and wherein causing the acquisition of the two or more slices within the quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles further comprises causing accelerated acquisition of the two or more slices by under-sampling the two or more slices. 10. The system according to claim 9 , wherein the target volume of the patient anatomy is the patient's heart. 11. The system according to claim 9 , wherein the controller is further configured to: use data from a pre-scan of the volume of patient anatomy to determine positions of the one or more saturation areas proximate to the target volume of the patient anatomy; and acquire the two or more imaging slices of the image having the one or more saturation areas at the determined positions. 12. The system according to claim 11 , wherein the controller is further configured to: determine the positions of the one or more saturation areas by detecting a boundary of the target volume of the patient anatomy in the pre-scan; and position the one or more saturation areas at the edge of the detected boundary of the target volume of the patient anatomy. 13. The system according to claim 12 , wherein the controller is further configured to detect the boundary of the patient's heart by: analyzing pixel intensity distribution across the image of the pre-scan; and determine whether the pixel intensity of the target volume of the patient anatomy and the pixel intensity of the volume of anatomy proximate to the target volume of the patient anatomy is equal to or within a predetermined pixel intensity threshold. 14. The system according to claim 8 , wherein the controller is further configured to cause the plurality of RF coils to acquire the plurality of slices of the image by interleaving the plurality of slices of the image and acquire consecutive slices with similar intensity levels consecutively within the quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles. 15. An article of manufacture for operating a multi-slice, multi-segment magnetic resonance (MR) imaging system, the article of manufacture comprising a non-transitory, tangible computer-readable medium holding computer-executable instructions for performing a method comprising: generating radio frequency (RF) excitation pulses in a volume of patient anatomy comprising a heart to provide subsequent acquisition of associated RF echo data; generating slice select magnetic field gradients for phase encoding and readout RF data acquisition in the volume of patient anatomy; acquiring a plurality of slices of an image of the volume of patient anatomy within a plurality of cycles, each of the plurality of cycles representing time period between successive beats of the patient's heart; causing, by a control processor, accelerated acquisition of two or more slices of the plurality of slices within a quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles; applying, by the control processor, one or more saturation areas proximate to a target volume of the patient anatomy; and wherein the method further comprises causing the acquisition of the two or more slices within the quiescent phase of each of the plurality of cycles further comprises causing accelerated acquisition of the two or more slices by under sampling the two or more slices. 16. The article of manufacture of claim 15 , wherein the method further comprises: using data from a pre-scan of the volume of patient anatomy to determine positions of
Angiography, e.g. contrast-enhanced angiography [CE-MRA] or time-of-flight angiography [TOF-MRA] · CPC title
using spatially selective suppression or saturation of MR signals · CPC title
of multiple slices · CPC title
MR characterised by data acquisition along a specific k-space trajectory or by the temporal order of k-space coverage, e.g. centric or segmented coverage of k-space · CPC title
for the heart · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.