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. 1991 Sep-Oct;18(5):1038-44.
doi: 10.1118/1.596739.

Gradient moment nulling for steady-state free precession MR imaging of cerebrospinal fluid

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Gradient moment nulling for steady-state free precession MR imaging of cerebrospinal fluid

M L Wood et al. Med Phys. 1991 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

Steady-state free precession (SSFP) pulse sequences can produce magnetic resonance (MR) images rapidly, in which cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is several times more intense than the other tissues. However, motion in the presence of magnetic field gradients reduces the intensity of CSF drastically, unless the time integral of the gradient waveform between each radio-frequency (rf) pulse vanishes. The consequences of motion on SSFP are explored here in detail theoretically and experimentally. The principle of gradient moment nulling is applied with the objective of giving CSF in SSFP images uniformly high intensity everywhere, in spite of motion. Theoretical analysis of the phase of the transverse magnetization from a group of isochromats, with a trajectory described by a Taylor series, reveals how motion along each direction disrupts SSFP and also causes ghost artifacts. Images of CSF in the cervical spine are found to have less extensive flow voids and weaker ghosts from pulsation if the first moment calculated from the rf pulse to the center of the gradient echo vanishes for both the frequency encoding and slice selection gradient waveforms. However, first-order moment nulling of the phase encoding gradient waveform is unnecessary for SSFP imaging of CSF.

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