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Articles

Articles are a collaborative effort to provide a single canonical page on all topics relevant to the practice of radiology. As such, articles are written and continuously improved upon by countless contributing members. Our dedicated editors oversee each edit for accuracy and style. Find out more about articles.

716 results found
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Superparamagnetism

Superparamagnetic materials consist of individual domains of elements that have ferromagnetic properties in bulk. Their magnetic susceptibility is between that of ferromagnetic and paramagnetic materials.  The figure illustrates the effect of a superparamagnetic material (grey circle) on the ma...
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Central point artifact

The central point artifact is a focal dot of increased signal in the center of an image. It is caused by a constant offset of the DC voltage in the receiver. After Fourier transformation, this constant offset gives the bright dot in the center of the image as shown in the diagram. The axial MRI...
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MKS system

The MKS (or mks) system (or meter-kilogram-second) of units predated the current International System of Units (also known as SI), which is the current iteration of the metric system. Although many fields, including most of the healthcare sciences have abandoned the MKS system for everyday work...
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NIfTI (file format)

NIfTI is a type of file format for neuroimaging. Technically there are NIfTI-1 and NIfTI-2 file formats. The NIfTI-2 format is an update on NIfTI-1 that allows more data to be stored. NIfTI files are used very commonly in imaging informatics for neuroscience and even neuroradiology research. In ...
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Inversion recovery sequences

Inversion recovery pulse sequences are a type of MRI sequence used to selectively null the signal for certain tissues (e.g. fat or fluid). Inversion recovery can also generate heavily T1-weighted images and was originally developed for this purpose. Physics Basically, an inversion recovery (I...
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Fringe field (MRI)

The fringe field is the peripheral magnetic field outside of the magnet core. It is important because it can cause interference with nearby electronic devices, such as pacemakers. Although the strength of the magnetic fields decreases with distance from the core of the magnet, the effect of the ...
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Units of measurement

For units of measurement the use of SI units (both base and derived units) in articles and cases on Radiopaedia.org is preferred. This is in line with best scientific practice and helps maintain consistency across the site. Terminology By scientific convention: for eponymous units, the full n...
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Phase-sensitive inversion recovery

Phase-sensitive inversion recovery (PSIR), also known as phase-corrected inversion recovery (PCIR), refers to an inversion recovery MRI pulse sequence that accounts for the positive and negative polarities and preserves the information of tissue magnetization during the recovery from the initial...
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Schuller's view

Schuller's view is a oblique radiographic projection used to demonstrate the petrous temporal bone, internal auditory canal and bony labyrinth. It has an increasingly limited role in contemporary clinical practice because of the universal use of CT and MRI for imaging the temporal bone.  Patien...
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Antoine Henri Becquerel

Antoine Henri Becquerel (1852-1908) was a French scientist renowned for his work and subsequent discovery of radioactivity for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1903. Early life Antoine Henri Becquerel was born on 15 December 1852 in Paris, France to a family of nobility and ...
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CheckList for EvaluAtion of Radiomics research (CLEAR)

The CheckList for Evaluation of Radiomics Research (CLEAR) is a 58-item reporting guideline designed specifically for radiomics. It aims to improve the quality of reporting in radiomics research 1. CLEAR is endorsed by the European Society of Radiology (ESR) and the European Society of Medical I...
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Inhomogeneity artifact

The inhomogeneity artifact is a type of magnetic resonance imaging artifact that occurs due to multiple factors, such as irregular anatomical area (for example, shoulder, hips, ankles), presence of metallic objects or inhomogeneity of the main field. The inhomogeneity artifact appears as hyperi...
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Spatial pulse length (ultrasound)

Spatial pulse length in ultrasound imaging describes the length of time that an ultrasound pulse occupies in space. Mathematically, it is the product of the number of cycles in a pulse and the wavelength.  A shorter spatial pulse length results in higher axial resolution. Spatial pulse length c...
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Negative enhancement integral

The negative enhancement integral in MR perfusion is used to calculate the relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV).  It represents the area described by the baseline and the signal loss due to passage of contrast bolus in tissue. 
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Velocity encoding

Velocity encoding or Venc is referred to as an operator-controlled parameter for the determination of the maximum velocity within a velocity-encoded phase contrast imaging study. Usage Velocity-encoding (Venc) gradients are used to generate a phase shift in magnetic resonance phase contrast im...
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Low-field magnetic resonance imaging

Low-field magnetic resonance imaging is an emerging approach to MRI imaging, which aims to provide diagnostic image quality using devices with several magnitude lower field strength (typically well under 0.1T) than most stationary units. The reduced field strength of these devices allows improv...
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Anode angle

The anode angle refers to the angle the target surface of the anode sits at in relation to the vertical.  Most x-ray tubes have an anode angle of 12-15 degrees but greater or lesser angles can also be used depending on the application. The degree of angulation of the anode affects the effective...
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CT gastrointenstinal bleed (protocol)

A CT gastro-intestinal bleed protocol utilizes a multiphasic technique to detect active gastrointestinal bleeding (as well as other potential non-bleeding bowel disease 1.  Note: This article is a general guideline for evaluating CT gastrointestinal bleeds. Protocol factors are variable as they...
Article

Diffusion kurtosis imaging

Diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) is an advanced neuroimaging modality which is an extension of diffusion tensor imaging by estimating the kurtosis (skewed distribution) of water diffusion based on a probability distribution function. It provides a high order diffusion of water distribution and a...
Article

Glutamine-Glutamate peak

Glutamate-Glutamine (Glx) peak is one of the regions assessed on MR spectroscopy, and resonates between 2.2 and 2.4 ppm chemical shift. It overlaps with the GABA peak and cannot be routinely separated from each other. The concentration of these two brain metabolites increases in hepatic and hypo...

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