An
MRI scanner is basically a large
magnet, super-cooled, that utilizes
radio waves and computers to create
digital images on a screen. There
is a horizontal tube running through
the magnet from front to back
(open at both ends). You lie on
your back, and slide into the
bore on a special table. Whether
or not you go in head first or
feet first, as well as how far
in the magnet you will go, is
determined by the type of exam
to be performed.
PIC's GE Signa
Excite HD 1.5 Scanner
In conjunction with
radio wave pulses of energy, the
MRI scanner can pick out a very
small point inside the patient's
body and ask it, essentially,
"What type of tissue are
you?" The point might be
a cube that is half a millimeter
on each side. The MRI system goes
through the patient's body point
by point, building up a 2-D or
3-D map of tissue types.
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| Axial MRA
Brain showing Circle of
Willis
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Axial MRI Brain |