Claims
- 1. A method of echo planar magnetic resonance imaging with reduced flow artifacts when material flows in an imaged plane comprising the steps of:
- a) selectively exciting nuclei spins in an object to be imaged,
- b) applying read-out gradients to said object to scan k-space with the scanning parallel to one axis near the origin of k-space being in one direction and elsewhere in k-space scanning parallel to said axis being bidirectional, and
- c) detecting signals from said nuclei during read-out.
- 2. The method as defined by claim 1 wherein said scans begin at the origin of k-space and move outwardly in an inside-out trajectory.
- 3. The method as defined by claim 1 wherein said scans begin away from the origin of k-space and move through the center of k-space using a partial-Fourier trajectory.
- 4. The method as defined by claim 1 wherein line scans with scanning in said one direction is no greater than 50% of all line scans.
- 5. Apparatus for imaging nuclei in a plane of an object in which material flows comprising:
- a) means for establishing a static magnetic field through said object,
- b) means for selectively exciting nuclei spins in said object,
- c) means for applying read-out gradients to said object to scan k-space with the scanning parallel to one axis near the origin of k-space being in one direction and elsewhere in k-space scanning being bidirectional, and
- d) means for detecting signals from said nuclei during read-out.
- 6. Apparatus as defined by claim 5 wherein said scans begin at the origin of k-space and move outwardly in an inside-out direction.
- 7. Apparatus as defined by claim 5 wherein said scans begin away from the origin of k-space and move through the center of k-space in a partial-Fourier trajectory.
- 8. Apparatus as defined by claim 5 wherein line scans with scanning in said one direction is no greater than 50% of all line scans.
Government Interests
This invention was made with U.S. Government support under grant No. HL 39297 awarded to Stanford University by the National Institute of Health. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
US Referenced Citations (4)