EE225E/BIOE265 Spring 2014 Principles of MRI. Assignment 6. Due Friday March 7th, 2014, Self Grading Due Monday March 10th, 2014

Similar documents
EE225E/BIOE265 Spring 2012 Principles of MRI. Assignment 7. Due March 16, 2012

EE225E/BIOE265 Spring 2011 Principles of MRI. Assignment 6 Solutions. (y 0 + vt) dt. 2 y 0T + 3 )

EE469B: Assignment 1 Solutions

EE469B: Assignment 4 Solutions

EE469B: Assignment 2 Solutions

Background (~EE369B)

k y 2k y,max k x 2k x,max

RF Pulse Toolkit: Application Specific Design

RAD 229: MRI Signals and Sequences

RF pulse design and the Small Tip Angle Approximation

EE225E/BIOE265 Spring 2013 Principles of MRI. Assignment 3. x 2 + y 2 0

RF Pulse Design. Multi-dimensional Excitation II. M229 Advanced Topics in MRI Kyung Sung, Ph.D Class Business

Half-Pulse Excitation Pulse Design and the Artifact Evaluation

Principles of MRI EE225E / BIO265. Lecture 21. Instructor: Miki Lustig UC Berkeley, EECS. M. Lustig, EECS UC Berkeley

A k-space Analysis of Small-Tip-Angle Excitation

M R I Physics Course. Jerry Allison Ph.D., Chris Wright B.S., Tom Lavin B.S., Nathan Yanasak Ph.D. Department of Radiology Medical College of Georgia

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING

NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Magn Reson Med. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 July 21.

Gradient Spoiling. Average balanced SSFP magnetization Reduce sensitivity to off-resonance. FFE, FISP, GRASS, GRE, FAST, Field Echo

Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. Root-flipped multiband radiofrequency pulse design. For Peer Review. Journal: Magnetic Resonance in Medicine

Advanced MSK MRI Protocols at 3.0T. Garry E. Gold, M.D. Associate Professor Department of Radiology Stanford University

Lab 8 6.S02 Spring 2013 MRI Projection Imaging

A. SPECIFIC AIMS: phase graph (EPG) algorithms to cover a wide range of MRI

Pulse Sequences: Rapid Gradient Echo

The development of the RF-pulse for the low level SAR used by the MRI.

Additive Angle Method for Fast Large-Tip-Angle RF Pulse Design in Parallel Excitation

Fast Joint design of RF and Gradient waveforms for MRI parallel excitation

H 2 O and fat imaging

2015 Spin echoes and projection imaging

10. Phase Cycling and Pulsed Field Gradients Introduction to Phase Cycling - Quadrature images

Lab 3 SPECTRUM ANALYSIS OF THE PERIODIC RECTANGULAR AND TRIANGULAR SIGNALS 3.A. OBJECTIVES 3.B. THEORY

MRI: From Signal to Image

Pulse Sequence Design Made Easier

SIEMENS MAGNETOM Skyra syngo MR D13

Pulse Sequence Design and Image Procedures

Mapping the Flip Angle in Magnetic Resonance Imaging Using the Accelerated 3D Look-Locker Sequence

MRI Summer Course Lab 2: Gradient Echo T1 & T2* Curves

MATLAB Assignment. The Fourier Series

Lecture 7: Basics of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): one dimensional Fourier imaging

Electronic Circuits. Laboratory 6 - Solution

Design of FIR Filters

6.S02 MRI Lab Acquire MR signals. 2.1 Free Induction decay (FID)

A k-space Analysis of MR Tagging

(N)MR Imaging. Lab Course Script. FMP PhD Autumn School. Location: C81, MRI Lab B0.03 (basement) Instructor: Leif Schröder. Date: November 3rd, 2010

Optimum Bandpass Filter Bandwidth for a Rectangular Pulse

Modern radio techniques

Gradients. Effects of B0 gradients on transverse magnetisation Similar to figure 10 of Sattler review Progr. NMR 34 (1999), 93

functional MRI: A primer

= knd 1/ 2 m 2 / 3 t 1/ 6 c

1 Introduction. 2 The basic principles of NMR

Variable-Rate Selective Excitation for Rapid MRI Sequences

Designing Long-T 2 Suppression Pulses for Ultra-short Echo Time (UTE) Imaging

Digital Signal Processing Fourier Analysis of Continuous-Time Signals with the Discrete Fourier Transform

EE 422G - Signals and Systems Laboratory

UNIT II: Clocked Synchronous Sequential Circuits. CpE 411 Advanced Logic Circuits Design 1

MARP. MR Accreditation Program Quality Control Beyond Just the Scans and Measurements July 2005

PHY3902 PHY3904. Nuclear magnetic resonance Laboratory Protocol

1.Explain the principle and characteristics of a matched filter. Hence derive the expression for its frequency response function.

Slice profile optimization in arterial spin labeling using presaturation and optimized RF pulses

Pulsed VNA Measurements:

HETERONUCLEAR IMAGING. Topics to be Discussed:

Week 4: Experiment 24. Using Nodal or Mesh Analysis to Solve AC Circuits with an addition of Equivalent Impedance

Homework Assignment 06

Activity 3: Mechanical Waves and Energy Transfer

Medical Imaging. X-rays, CT/CAT scans, Ultrasound, Magnetic Resonance Imaging

George Mason University Signals and Systems I Spring 2016

Steady-state sequences: Spoiled and balanced methods

Biomedical Signals. Signals and Images in Medicine Dr Nabeel Anwar

Image Quality/Artifacts Frequency (MHz)

3D-Printed Microstrip Resonators for 4.7T MRI. Saeed Javidmehr. A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of

EE3723 : Digital Communications

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHARLOTTE Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Chapter 2 Simple Electro-Magnetic Circuits

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Encoding of inductively measured k-space trajectories in MR raw data

Signals. Periodic vs. Aperiodic. Signals

Experience in implementing continuous arterial spin labeling on a commercial MR scanner

EC Transmission Lines And Waveguides

Experiment #10: Passive Filter Design

Radar-Verfahren und -Signalverarbeitung

Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT)

Problem Set 1 (Solutions are due Mon )

Iterative RF pulse design for multi-dimensional, small-tip-angle selective excitation

In this exam, there is a total of 35 questions resulting in 53 possible points. TestResult = floor(sum(points)/4.86);

Multirate Digital Signal Processing

Filters. Signals are sequences of numbers. Simple algebraic operations on signals can perform useful functions: shifting multiplication addition

ECE438 - Laboratory 7a: Digital Filter Design (Week 1) By Prof. Charles Bouman and Prof. Mireille Boutin Fall 2015

Fund. of Digital Communications Ch. 3: Digital Modulation

The Filter Wizard issue 35: Turn linear phase into truly linear phase Kendall Castor-Perry

Supplementary Figure 1. Scanning Electron Microscopy images of the pristine electrodes. (a) negative electrode and (b) positive electrode.

3T Unlimited. ipat on MAGNETOM Allegra The Importance of ipat at 3T. medical

Field Simulation Software to Improve Magnetic Resonance Imaging

DECEMBER 1964 NUMBER OF COPIES: 75

ECE 342 Fall 2017 Optoelectronic Link Project Lab 2: Active Bandpass Filters

Improving high-field MRI using parallel excitation

CHAPTER 5. Additional Problems (a) The AM signal is defined by st () = A c. k a A c 1

Exam in 1TT850, 1E275. Modulation, Demodulation and Coding course

EE5713 : Advanced Digital Communications

AC CURRENTS, VOLTAGES, FILTERS, and RESONANCE

MR Advance Techniques. Flow Phenomena. Class II

Transcription:

EE225E/BIOE265 Spring 2014 Principles of MRI Miki Lustig 1. Read Nishimura Ch. 6 Assignment 6 Due Friday March 7th, 2014, Self Grading Due Monday March 10th, 2014 2. Nishimura assignment 6.5 3. Mimimum-Phase RF Excitation a) We would like to use the waveform plotted below as an RF excitation pulse. Assume that the slice select gradient is applied during the pulse, and then inverted to refocus the slice. What is the duration of the refocusing gradient that produces the maximum signal? b) If we refocus for 2 ms, which is 1/2 the slice select gradient length, how does the signal compare to that of part (a)? 0.03 0.02 B1(t), G 0.01 0 0.01 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 Time, ms 1

4. From Midterm I 2011: RF Excitation and Excitation k-space For each of the following selective excitations, find (qualitatively) the associated excitation k-space and the magnitude of the slice profile at the end of the pulse, e.g., M xy (z, T ). Draw them qualitatively, pointing out the interesting parts. Assume small tip-angle approximation. a) What do these pulses do? B1 Gz Kz Mxy b) What do these pulses do? B1 Gz Kz Mxy c) What do these pulses do? B1 Gz Kz Mxy 2

5. In this problem we will determine the excitation profile of the following pulse, below on the left, RF Δk z = 1 cycle/cm a(t) G z 0 2 4 6 8 t, ms 0 1 2 4 6 8 t, ms This is a small-tip-angle pulse. The RF and gradient are applied alternately. One lobe of the gradient produces a change in k z of k z = γ 1 G(τ)dτ = 1 cycle/cm 2π 0 The area of each RF subpulse corresponds to a sample of a T BW = 4 windowed sinc shown above on the right. a) Plot the magnitude of the spectrum A(f) of the sampled windowed sinc. You do not have to compute an expression. Label the axes of the plot. A( f ) -2-1 0 1 2 f, khz b) Plot the k-space weighting that the RF pulse produces. γb 1 (t) vs k(t) -8-4 0 4 8 k z, cycles/cm c) Plot the magnitude of the magnetization M xy (z) produced by the RF pulse. Hint: Appoximate the RF pulse as an ideal sampled pulse as in (a) with a constant gradient. M xy (z) -2-1 0 1 2 z, cm 3

6. Relaxation During RF Pulses (From Midterm II 2012) When deriving the small-tip-angle approximation for slice selective RF pulses we assumed that the RF pulse duration is much smaller than T2, and so it can be neglected. This is a good approximation in general, but fails when the T2 relaxation is short. In this question we will explore the case when T2 relaxation can not be neglected anymore. We will still assume the small-tip-angle approximation in which M z = M 0 for the entire pulse duration. Under this approximation, at each time point new transverse magnetization is created and evolves independently. For example, consider the following pulse B 1 t=0 G z G t=t 1 t=t The B 1 field at time t = t 1 will produce new transverse magnetization M xy (z, t 1 ) = im 0 sin(γb 1 (t 1 ) t) im 0 γb 1 (t 1 ) t a) The new x-verse magnetization M xy (z, t 1 ) will evolve over time. Find an expression for it at the end of the pulse (at time T). Assume transverse relaxation T 2. M xy (z, t) at time T = 4

b) Show that the slice profile M xy (z, T ) has the form of M xy (z, T ) = iγm 0 T 0 B 1 (t)e i2πkz(t)z dt Find the expression for the effective RF field B 1 (t) as a function of the original B 1 (t). What is k z (t)? B 1 (t) = k z (t) = c) The slice profile can be expressed as a Fourier transform in excitation k-space M xy (z, T ) = iγm 0 k z B1 (k z )e i2πkzz dk z. For the above pulse, find the expression for t as a function of k z, then find the effective RF field in k-space B 1 (k z ). B 1 (k z ) has the form: B1 (k z ) = C W (k z )B 1 (k z ) where C is a constant and W (k z ) is a function of k z ) B 1 (k z ) = t(k z ) = 5

d) What will be the (two) effects of T 2 relaxation on the actual slice profile? Explain. Effect I: Effect II: e) The T2 of white matter is two orders of magnitude longer than the T2 of myelin. Design (qualitatively) a slice selective RF pulse that will mostly excite myelin. B 1 G z 7. Design the following slice-selective excitation pulses. In each case, choose a time-bandwidth product that is a multiple of four. The maximum gradient strength is 4 G/cm. Assume the excitation pulse is a Hamming windowed sinc, as we described in class, and that we want the sharpest profile within the constraints. a) Design a pulse to excite a 3 mm slice. The pulse should be 1 ms in duration. Find the timebandwidth of the pulse, and the amplitude of the slice-select gradient. b) Design a pulse to excite a 8 cm slab. Assume we want to use a time-bandwidth 16 pulse, and that the shortest time we can play this waveform is 2 ms, due to limits on peak RF amplitude. What is the gradient amplitude? c) A 2 ms, time-bandwidth 8 pulse is to be used to excite a 1 cm slice centered at +12 cm from gradient isocenter (the zero point of the gradients). Find the gradient amplitude for this pulse, and the frequency for the RF pulse compared to the slice at isocenter. 8. Introduction: This assignment concerns typical Fourier transform designs of excitation pulses. This includes designing windowed sinc pulses, calculating the RF amplitude required, simulating slice profiles,designing a pulse for a specific application, and computing the relative SAR of a pulse sequence. For simulating the slice profile, you will need the bloch simulator. 6

a. Design of Windowed Sinc RF Pulses Write an m-file that computes a Hamming windowed sinc pulse, given a time-bandwidth product, and number of samples. >> rf = wsinc(timebandwidth, samples) Write the mfile so that it scales the waveform to sum to one, sum(rf) = 1. Plot windowed sincs with TBW of 4, 8, and 12. The TBW=4 pulse is common for 180 degree pulses, the TBW of 8 is typical for excitation pulses, and a TBW of 12 or 16 is typical for slab select pulses. b. Plot RF Amplitude For convenience, we will assume that the RF waveforms are normalized so that the sum of the RF waveform is the flip angle in radians. The sampled RF waveform can then be thought of as a sequence of small flips. This eliminates the need to explicitly consider the pulse duration in the design and simulation. However, it is sometimes important to compute the RF pulse amplitude in Gauss. In this problem you will write an m-file that takes a normalized RF pulse, and then, given a overall pulse length, scales the waveform to Gauss. First, generate a 3.2 ms, T BW = 8 windowed sinc RF pulse, and scale it to a π/2 flip angle >> rf = (pi/2)* wsinc(8,256); Then, write an m-file called rfscaleg that takes a normalized RF pulse and a pulse duration, and returns a waveform that is scaled to Gauss, >> rfs = rfscaleg(rf, pulseduration); Plot the pulse you generated, scaled to Gauss. Label the axes. What is the peak amplitude? c. Simulated Slice Profiles We will use the bloch simulator for simulating the RF pulse. Calculate the slice thickness of the T BW = 8 pulse from problem (b), based on the relations presented in class. Assume the slice select gradient is 0.6 G/cm. Simulate the RF pulse using > dp = linspace(-2,2,512). ; % simulate from -2cm to 2cm > mx0 = zeros(512,1); my0=zeros(512,1);, mz0 = ones(512,1); > dt = 3.2e-3/256; > [mx,my,mz] = bloch(rfs,g,dt,100,100,0,dp,0,mx0,my0,mz0); > mxy = mx+i*my; > figure, plot(dp,abs(mxy)), xlabel( cm ), ylabel( amplitude ); Is the slice the expected width? d. Design a Slab Select Pulse You are designing a 3D pulse sequence, and you need a slab select pulse in the z dimension. You have 6 ms for the pulse, and want it to be as sharp as possible. You also have a peak RF amplitude constraint of 0.17 G. (a) What is the highest time-bandwidth you can allow, given that the maximum flip angle will be 90 degrees? 7

(b) Assume we want the minimum slab thickness to be 8 cm. What is the gradient amplitude that this requires? (c) Simulate the slice profile. How wide is the transition band compared to the passband? Assume that the passband edge is 95% of the middle of the passband, and the stopband edge is 5% of the passband. e. Compute the Relative SAR of a Pulse Sequence SAR stands for specific absorption rate and is the amount of RF energy deposition in the body. Usually, this is calculated using software model that gives the SAR limit measured in terms of 1 ms rectangular 180 degree pulses ( hard 180 s). This depends on the patient weight, body part, and RF coil. The limit might be 100 hard 180s per second, for example. The power of a particular RF pulse is P = B1(t) 2 dt. The relative SAR of a particular RF pulse is it s power divided by the power in a 1 ms hard 180. The relative SAR of a pulse sequence is computed as the sum of the relative SAR s of each of the pulses, measured in equivalent hard 180 s. Write an mfile rsar.m which takes a normalized RF pulse and pulse duration, and returns the relative SAR, measured in equivalent hard 180 s >> eq180 = rsar(rf,t) Assume that you are developing a very fast sequence. The excitation pulse is a 1 ms TBW=2 windowed sinc. Assume you need a TR of 2.25 ms. What is the maximum flip angle you can allow, given that the SAR limit is 100 equivalent 180 s per second? 8