Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Magnetic_resonance_imaging> ?p ?o }
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging abstract "Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (NMRI), or magnetic resonance tomography (MRT) is a medical imaging technique used in radiology to image the anatomy and the physiological processes of the body in both health and disease. MRI scanners use strong magnetic fields, radio waves, and field gradients to form images of the body.Many atomic nuclei have a property called \"spin\", which is associated with a magnetic dipole moment (analogous to a compass needle). All hydrogen atoms have nuclear spin, and are thus detectable by MRI. Water, having molecular formula H2O, contains a vast number of hydrogen atoms. The human body is roughly 70-percent water by mass, and most MRI scans essentially measure the spatial distribution of water in the object being imaged. The large tube into which the subject is placed is surrounded by a superconducting solenoid that produces a strong magnetic field down the length of the bore. This magnetic field aligns the nuclear spins and generates an energy difference between spins aligned with or against the field. At any feasible field strength (typical values are 1.5 or 3.0 tesla), the energy difference is in the radio frequency range of the electromagnetic spectrum. To generate an image, pulses of radio-frequency energy are emitted by antennas that excite the nuclear spin energy transition. As the spins return to equilibrium (i.e. \"relax\"), they emit radio-waves with a frequency dependent on the strength of the magnetic field. This RF emission is very faint (on the order of 10−12 watts), and is received by antennas close to the anatomy being imaged. By creating a precise and known gradient in the main magnetic field (with additional RF coils), nuclei at different positions will have different frequencies. The Fourier transform can then be computed, extracting the contribution of these many different frequencies from the signal. A particular frequency corresponds to the signal from water at a particular location (voxel) and an image can be reconstructed. While the hydrogen protons of water are the most often imaged nuclei, phosphorus, sodium, and carbon are sometimes used in specialty applications. There is also a wide variety of techniques that can be used while still measuring the hydrogen nuclei, including diffusion weighted MRI (DWI), contrast enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI), and functional MRI (fMRI).MRI is widely used in hospitals and clinics for medical diagnosis, staging of disease and follow-up without exposing the body to ionizing radiation.".
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging thumbnail White_Matter_Connections_Obtained_with_MRI_Tractography.png?width=300.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink safe_mr07.aspx.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink mri.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink www.magnetic-resonance.org.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink index.jsp.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink www.MRIsafety.com.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=132&Itemid=39.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink re-whole-body-magnetic-resonance-imaging.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink mri.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink magnetic_resonance_imaging.html.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink PatientVideo.html.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink sea_38.htm.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink 20-01.html.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink idcplg?IdcService=GET_FILE&dDocName=CON2033065&RevisionSelectionMethod=LatestReleased.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink cpp.html.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageExternalLink 73.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageID "19446".
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageLength "111057".
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageOutDegree "319".
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageRevisionID "707914739".
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink A-weighting.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink ASTM_International.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Ablation.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink American_College_of_Physicians.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink American_College_of_Radiology.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Anaphylaxis.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Anatomy.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Aneurysm.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Angiography.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Anisotropy.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Artificial_cardiac_pacemaker.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Asphyxia.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Atom.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Atomic_nucleus.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Atrophy.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Axon.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Bile_duct.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Biliary_tract.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Bleeding.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Blood-oxygen-level_dependent.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Blood_vessel.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Brownian_motion.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink CT_scan.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cancer.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cancer_staging.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cancerous_micronuclei.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Carbon.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cardiomyopathy.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Category:1973_introductions.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_inventions.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Category:Articles_containing_video_clips.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cryogenics.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Category:Discovery_and_invention_controversies.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Category:Magnetic_resonance_imaging.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Celsius.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Central_nervous_system.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cerebrovascular_disease.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Chelation.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Claustrophobia.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cochlear_implant.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cognitive_science.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Colorectal_cancer.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Computed_tomography_of_the_heart.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Concentration.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Congenital_disorder.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Congenital_heart_defect.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Coronary_artery_disease.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cost-effectiveness_analysis.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Cryogenics.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink DNA_repair.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Deficit_Reduction_Act_of_2005.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Dementia.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Demyelinating_disease.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Dialysis.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Diffusion.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Diffusion_MRI.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Dynamic_contrast-enhanced_MRI.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink EXIT_procedure.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Earths_field_NMR.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Echocardiography.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Edema.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Electroencephalography.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Electromagnetic_spectrum.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Electron_paramagnetic_resonance.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Eloquent_cortex.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Epilepsy.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Erik_Odeblad.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Erwin_Hahn.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Excited_state.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Exogeny.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Fast_low_angle_shot_magnetic_resonance_imaging.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Ferromagnetism.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Fetal_intervention.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Fetal_surgery.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Fetal_tumor.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Fluorine.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Food_and_Drug_Administration.
- Magnetic_resonance_imaging wikiPageWikiLink Foreign_body.