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Coil Sensitivity Encoding in MR Imaging

Advantages and Disadvantages in Clinical Practice

Yasuyuki Kurihara1, Yoshiko K. Yakushiji1, Ichiro Tani1, Yasuo Nakajima1 and Marc Van Cauteren2

1 Department of Radiology, St. Marianna University School of Medicine, 2-16-1 Sugao, Miyamae-Ku, Kawasaki City, Kanagawa, 216-8511, Japan.
2 Philips Medical Systems Corporation, Philips Bldg., 13-37 Kohnan 2-chome Minato-Ku, Tokyo, 108, Japan.



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Fig. 1A. Coil sensitivity encoding (SENSE) procedure in MR imaging. Conventional Fourier transformation produces fewer phase encoding steps (R factor, 2) and results in reduction of field of view, causing typical foldover or aliasing artifact.

 


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Fig. 1B. Coil sensitivity encoding (SENSE) procedure in MR imaging. SENSE reconstruction algorithm separates superimposed signals using information on individual coil sensitivities and restores full field-of-view image. R factor = SENSE reduction factor.

 


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Fig. 2A. 49-year-old woman with ovarian cysts. T2-weighted sagittal spin-echo MR image (TR/TE, 3500/1100) shows blurred bowel tract and muscle (arrows) due to respiratory motion and bowel peristalsis. Scan time for 15 slices was 1 min 35 sec.

 


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Fig. 2B. 49-year-old woman with ovarian cysts. T2-weighted sagittal spin-echo MR image (3500/1100) using coil sensitivity encoding (R factor, 2) shows anatomic structures (arrows) more clearly than A because of suppression of motion artifact. Scan time for 15 slices was 53 sec.

 


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Fig. 3A. 61-year-old woman with Takayasu's arteritis. High-resolution contrast-enhanced MR angiography carotid images (TR/TE, 4.0/1.0) using two-dimensional coil sensitivity encoding technique (R factor, 4) provide high temporal-resolution dynamic study. Maximum-intensity-projection angiograms from three-dimensional volumes are shown acquired at 8 (A), 12 (B), 16 (C), and 20 sec (D) after injection of gadolinium-enhanced contrast agent. Field of view is 529 x 529 mm. Each maximum-intensity-projection image is reconstructed with 24 slices of source images.

 


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Fig. 3B. 61-year-old woman with Takayasu's arteritis. High-resolution contrast-enhanced MR angiography carotid images (TR/TE, 4.0/1.0) using two-dimensional coil sensitivity encoding technique (R factor, 4) provide high temporal-resolution dynamic study. Maximum-intensity-projection angiograms from three-dimensional volumes are shown acquired at 8 (A), 12 (B), 16 (C), and 20 sec (D) after injection of gadolinium-enhanced contrast agent. Field of view is 529 x 529 mm. Each maximum-intensity-projection image is reconstructed with 24 slices of source images.

 


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Fig. 3C. 61-year-old woman with Takayasu's arteritis. High-resolution contrast-enhanced MR angiography carotid images (TR/TE, 4.0/1.0) using two-dimensional coil sensitivity encoding technique (R factor, 4) provide high temporal-resolution dynamic study. Maximum-intensity-projection angiograms from three-dimensional volumes are shown acquired at 8 (A), 12 (B), 16 (C), and 20 sec (D) after injection of gadolinium-enhanced contrast agent. Field of view is 529 x 529 mm. Each maximum-intensity-projection image is reconstructed with 24 slices of source images.

 


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Fig. 3D. 61-year-old woman with Takayasu's arteritis. High-resolution contrast-enhanced MR angiography carotid images (TR/TE, 4.0/1.0) using two-dimensional coil sensitivity encoding technique (R factor, 4) provide high temporal-resolution dynamic study. Maximum-intensity-projection angiograms from three-dimensional volumes are shown acquired at 8 (A), 12 (B), 16 (C), and 20 sec (D) after injection of gadolinium-enhanced contrast agent. Field of view is 529 x 529 mm. Each maximum-intensity-projection image is reconstructed with 24 slices of source images.

 


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Fig. 4. 35-year-old man with intralobar sequestration. High-resolution pulmonary MR angiogram using two times longer TR (8 msec) and coil sensitivity encoding (R factor, 2) shows perfusion defect in left lower lobe due to intra-lobar sequestration. Note increased signals from lung parenchyma because of longer T1 recovery.

 


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Fig. 5A. 49-year-old woman with cervical carcinoma of uterus. T2-weighted sagittal spin-echo MR image (TR/TE, 3500/1100) shows decreased signal intensity in marginal areas of field of view (arrows).

 


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Fig. 5B. 49-year-old woman with cervical carcinoma of uterus. T2-weighted sagittal spin-echo MR image (3500/1100) using coil sensitivity encoding (R factor, 2) shows uniform intensity of image (arrows).

 


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Fig. 6A. 27-year-old healthy male volunteer. T2-weighted axial spin-echo MR image (TR/TE, 3000/120; turbo factor, 13) results in strong fat intensity with J-coupling effects.

 


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Fig. 6B. 27-year-old healthy male volunteer. Coil sensitivity encoding image (R factor, 2) with same TR/TE as A, turbo factor of 7, and longer echo spacing shows suppression of bright fat signal.

 


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Fig. 7. 71-year-old woman with adrenal mass. Abdominal gradient-echo MR image (TR/TE, 215/2.3) using coil sensitivity encoding (SENSE) (R factor, 2) shows residual bright fat signal (large arrow) and "split-line" artifact (small arrows), which causes jump-up intensity at mid portion. Both rare artifacts could be caused by mismatch between reference scan and SENSE data acquisition.

 


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Fig. 8A. 45-year-old man with liver cirrhosis. Aliasing image before coil sensitivity encoding (SENSE) reconstruction algorithm shows foldover beyond midline of field of view because of small field-of-view setting.

 


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Fig. 8B. 45-year-old man with liver cirrhosis. SENSE reconstructed images (TR/TE, 520/20; flip angle, 20°; R factor, 2) shows remaining folded areas (arrows).

 

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