Phase Encoding Gradient MRI | MRI Signal Localisation | MRI Physics Course #9

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  • čas přidán 5. 07. 2023
  • High yield radiology physics past paper questions with video answers
    Perfect for testing yourself prior to your radiology physics exam 👇
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    =========================
    This is the final part of the MRI signal localisation talks. We will look at the process of phase encoding and how it can be used to calculate y axis signal location. This process requires the use of K space data and frequency encoded data. We will use a simple two signal example to illustrate the process.
    I owe much of my understanding of these concepts to Dr Allen Elster and his excellent website MRIquestions.com. Please do read his work if you are interested.
    =========================
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    Not sure if the question banks are for you?
    If you're here, you're likely studying for a radiology physics exam. I've spent the last few months collating past papers from multiple different countries selecting the most commonly asked questions. You'll be surprised how often questions repeat themselves!
    The types of questions asked in FRCR, RANZCR AIT, ARRT, FC Rad Diag (SA), ABR qualifying Core Physics and MICR part 1 are surprisingly similar and the key concepts remain the same throughout. I've taken the most high-yield questions and answered them in video format so that I can take you through why certain answers are correct and others are not.
    Happy studying,
    Michael
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Komentáře • 71

  • @radiologytutorials
    @radiologytutorials  Před 5 měsíci +8

    In the first few minutes of this video I take some time to recap what we've covered so far. For those looking to get straight to phase encoding, skip to 5:56

  • @allyharrison4163
    @allyharrison4163 Před 9 měsíci +13

    I have never commented on a CZcams video before but I wanted to thank you so much for making these concepts so much easier to understand. I am better off watching your youtube videos then my lectures from my professors. Keep up the fantastic work. I am sure I am not the only one who would like to give you credit.

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 9 měsíci +2

      Hi @allyharrison4163 - thank you for such a lovely comment! Really helps to keep me motivated to keep going! Glad you've enjoyed them 🥳

  • @luciemartinal2553
    @luciemartinal2553 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I have never seen any yt channel explain that complicated physics that well, it is so precise but so clear in the same time, thank you very much for your work !

  • @evamartinez7560
    @evamartinez7560 Před 10 měsíci +6

    This is brilliant. Thank you so so so much. I’m preparing my PhD qualifying exams and you’re being a lifesaver!!

  • @bodanamusicproduction876

    Thankyou Micheal appreciate your efforts

  • @mehboobalimehboobali5528

    Thankyou sir for best content ever on youtube

  • @gudurisuresh7431
    @gudurisuresh7431 Před rokem

    Thank you doctor 😊

  • @fazaltahir4216
    @fazaltahir4216 Před rokem +1

    Thanks a lot sir Michael 🎉
    Very nicely explained as usual 👏
    U r awesome 👌🏻

  • @user-xm6su9sf8z
    @user-xm6su9sf8z Před rokem

    Thankyou micheal🎉🎉

  • @sayanmanna5379
    @sayanmanna5379 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for these amazing videos! I'm a radiology resident here in the US and I literally have made some (correct) calls I wouldn't have because of your videos!!

  • @rajkumarsrinivasan7542
    @rajkumarsrinivasan7542 Před 4 měsíci

    Great Job

  • @merlo986
    @merlo986 Před rokem +1

    thank u i was seaching for all these information for days u just made it easyer❤❤

  • @christinabak-pedersen6914
    @christinabak-pedersen6914 Před 5 měsíci +1

    thank you so much for the great teaching, i wish you had teaching also on CT physics!!!!!!!

  • @felixfelizes
    @felixfelizes Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you!👌

  • @jzk9meow696
    @jzk9meow696 Před 7 měsíci

    Words cant even describe thank you so much
    Great teacher
    I wish i can meet you one day
    Big respect from iraq

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you so much! Perhaps one day we'll meet. Greetings from South Africa

  • @sohailkohri7269
    @sohailkohri7269 Před rokem

    Excellent job 😍😍

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před rokem

      Thanks Sohail. I hope it made sense. Difficult one to explain without getting too detailed 😆

    • @sohailkohri7269
      @sohailkohri7269 Před rokem

      @@radiologytutorials yes sir too much detailed confuse us fewer concepts enough to made my day😃😃

  • @nelsonbigaydiaz
    @nelsonbigaydiaz Před 9 měsíci

    thank you sir very much, these videos are helping me A LOT !!! actually I just might just study from these videos for the ARRT BOARD !!!

  • @shirindavies3669
    @shirindavies3669 Před 8 měsíci +2

    One thing I picked up. When at the beginning you say that in the absence of any gradients or RF pulses the spins are rotating in phase, that is not true. It is the application of 90 degree pulse that flips them and puts them in phase. Correct me if wrong but that is my understanding as a physicist.

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 7 měsíci +2

      You’re right. I must have misspoken! Phase coherence only occurs with excitation and resonance secondary to the RF pulse 👍🏼

  • @CatMedy
    @CatMedy Před rokem

    thank u a lot! i kove your videos

  • @MuhammadAli-jb5yp
    @MuhammadAli-jb5yp Před rokem

    Dear Michael, you are doing a great job! Kindly upload at least one video lecture daily...regards

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před rokem +14

      Thank you. Each video takes me in excess of 10-20 working hours to create. I make all the illustrations by hand, need to research and plan the best way to deliver the information, need to film, edit, colour grade, render, upload and render on CZcams, create a thumbnail etc. There’s just simply no way I can do daily uploads 😅

    • @theradiologistpage
      @theradiologistpage Před rokem +2

      @@radiologytutorialsI know personally how long this stuff takes to make (a 3-5 min video for me takes about 6 hours 😂) and am in awe at the hard work you’re putting in. You’re doing great things here. Keep going Michael!

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před rokem +2

      Thank you Naveen! You’ve been a great inspiration for me 🙏🏻 Appreciate the encouragement 🙂

  • @yashagrawal9193
    @yashagrawal9193 Před rokem

    excellent video. solved a lot of my doubts, got few new doubts.😅

  • @TatjanaSchmidt-ti4di
    @TatjanaSchmidt-ti4di Před 3 měsíci

    Brilliant video thank you! One thing I didn't understand about the two diagrams around minute 30 (k space vs. after first Fourier transform): why does the diagram on the right not have rows with less and less intense signal at the top and the bottom? Those were acquired with a stronger gradient so I thought they'd have weaker signal?

  • @KreativeChaos716
    @KreativeChaos716 Před 3 měsíci +1

    How do you tell by looking at a mri image which is the frequency direction vs phase direction

  • @anilaslihak
    @anilaslihak Před 6 měsíci +1

    At the 7th minute when you were explaining that the magnetization vectors within a slice were in phase with one another, I got confused. I thought all the vectors would be out of phase until they reach TE after the 180 degrees RF pulse, given that different tissues may exist within a selected slice?

  • @SuperFooltv
    @SuperFooltv Před rokem +3

    these tutorialos are a lifesaver. Micheal can you do flouro aswell. i cant understand that shit for the life of me 😫

  • @toxicheadtrip
    @toxicheadtrip Před 4 měsíci

    Hi there, I am trying to put together the bigger picture: the phase encoding gradient is applied to the entire slice, and spins in the phase direction change their rate of precession depending on their location embedding a phase shift, when we apply the 180 rephasing pulse at a certain point of relaxation, does it only rephase the spins that still have some transverse mag? How does the addition of the gradient change the echo if the spins all align anyway with rephasing?
    My understanding so far is that with a certain amount of relaxation, we get different amounts of signal depending on tissue, I that we have an echo that is a bunch of different signal strengths based on T1 and T2 differences, but how does the change of frequency along the phase encoding gradient fit into this?

  • @kalaulagm6857
    @kalaulagm6857 Před 4 měsíci

    can anybody please explain the advantages and disadvantages or a maxwell coil vs a golay coil?

  • @billyidolman4666
    @billyidolman4666 Před 7 měsíci

    Another question... it seems you overlay the frequency encoding chart with k-space when explaining how to get the final picture, is this accurate conceptually? Wouldn't this mean that a frequency encoding chart has a Y-axis? I thought that any frequency encoding basically generates rows all having the same frequency essentially just generating only more x-axis rows?

  • @shanishtabiharie8487
    @shanishtabiharie8487 Před měsícem

    hello sir, do you turn on the FEG again after the PEG is used? why do you have to turn the PEG off?

  • @DrZubiaTarar
    @DrZubiaTarar Před rokem +1

    Thank you Dr. A question: It is written in Sarah that in repeat cycles of phase encoding gradient, each point along the segment will have DIFFRENT FREQUENCY. Those that are at furthest ends will have higher frequency phase encoding curve. Those frequencies will differ when we apply frequency encoding gradient? You mentioned that frequencies will be same. These will be same before applying frequency encoding gradient?

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 11 měsíci +2

      Great observation. There are two separate frequencies being talked about here. The frequency of precession along the x axis will remain the same for each acquisition. The frequencies mentioned in the phase direction refers to the 2D frequency waveform vectors formed by both the imaginary and real components of the spins in the entire slice - these are dependent on the combination and phase and frequency gradients. In this course I have largely omitted 2D waveforms in order to avoid confusion. In the k-space talk when I mention the rate of change of frequencies increasing at the periphery of k space, I am referring to these 2D phase frequencies. Hope this hasn't caused you more confusion 😅

    • @DrZubiaTarar
      @DrZubiaTarar Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@radiologytutorials Thank you

  • @Geri_kariba
    @Geri_kariba Před 2 měsíci

    Does phase encoding only help with getting y-axis signals?

  • @xz6065
    @xz6065 Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you for uploading these helpful tutorials! I am confused about why FEG changes the frequency and PEG changes the phase of the spins, considering they both induce gradient fields?

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Great question. PEG also changes the frequency for the time the gradient is on. However, once the gradient is turned off the spins will continue to precess at larmor frequency but will be out of phase. The FEG changes frequency (and is applied whilst we are reading the signal - therefore that frequency change is registered in the signal). Hope that makes some sense 🤞🏼 let me know if you need more explanation 🙂

    • @xz6065
      @xz6065 Před 9 měsíci

      I see! Thank you so much! @@radiologytutorials

    • @xz6065
      @xz6065 Před 9 měsíci

      You explained things so clearly, I truly appreciate the help! @@radiologytutorials

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 9 měsíci

      Absolute pleasure! Glad it’s helpful 🙂

    • @stellamakrigianni608
      @stellamakrigianni608 Před 9 měsíci

      As I see it. The PEG gradient last for a short period of time, not enough as to cause a change at frequency that will translate to the signal.

  • @madchen.roentgen
    @madchen.roentgen Před 4 měsíci

    this was tough T_T

  • @jonathanmcintire6818
    @jonathanmcintire6818 Před 11 měsíci

    I get a little confused when you say something like "256 different pixels." To me, a "pixel" is a final representation of an image voxel in the matrix. Like a camera picture, it's the smallest form of the grey scale which makes the image. Do you mean it more like "256 data points" like a numerical value of signal intensity? As an MRI tech, when I change the frequency matrix, I'm thinking I'm changing the number of frequencies I want to sample. For example, if the default frequency encoding number is 256, I think that means I'm telling the scanner to use a gradient and signal math to give me 256 different frequencies across the slice. The data gathered in that gives the scanner 256 differences to measure across the slice. And if I want to half that, I can choose 128 and now I get 128 different frequencies across the slice. It's like I'm literally choosing a data matrix across the slice. Am I thinking of this correctly? Or am I missing something about how K space is filled from the frequency encoding? TIA!

    • @jonathanmcintire6818
      @jonathanmcintire6818 Před 11 měsíci

      To clarify, I think of a 256 frequency matrix as dividing the slice along the frequency direction into 256 "columns" of different frequencies. Half of that would be 128 "columns" across the same space, meaning less frequencies are used across the slice to encode the exact same space the 256 was. This would mean we are creating 128 detectable differences in the slice that we can then use to associate with the known applied gradient to give us spatial location along a single axis. Dividing this info into pixels doesn't quite make sense to me, and I'm hoping you can help me understand. I'm also a bit confused as to how k-space is filled and cross-referenced with the frequency data. I thought frequency data was included in k-space. I haven't reached your video on that yet, so the answer to my question might very well already be out there!

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 10 měsíci +2

      Sorry for the delay in replying. Your thinking is correct.
      Mostly these terms can be used interchangeably but there are subtle differences. Can't remember exactly how I phrased it in this talk (I may have caused some confusion). I try to use matrix size and pixels along the x axis as synonyms because both refer to the spatial resolution in the field of view. The matrix size determines the number of voxels and ultimately pixels we will display within the FOV.
      The data acquisition sample number (ie the number of digital data points we sample from the analogue signal) determines the number of frequencies we can separate using a Fourier transform. Some will call this the frequency matrix. You're right, the number of times we sample a signal will determine the number of different frequencies we can delineate and ultimately place on an x axis location. However, there are sequences where we oversample the frequency encoding direction and disregard data that falls outside of the field of view (like when we oversample to avoid aliasing). In this case the frequency matrix and the image matrix do not correspond.
      I may not have answered your question. If not, let's chat some more!

    • @jonathanmcintire6818
      @jonathanmcintire6818 Před 10 měsíci

      @@radiologytutorials I appreciate your reply , and thanks for telling me I'm kind of on the right track. I think what's hard about the pixel reference for me is that to encode 2 different locations within the same frequency, the phase encoding gradient has to come in to play to differentiate them. I think in the following video you clear all of this up pretty well.
      The hardest thing for my students to get over is this thought that we're still recording an image in MRI. I literally have started telling them "none of this is real!" lol. When they really grasp that there is no picture, that our images are graphical representations of electrical signals, I think it really helps them start understanding how chemical shift, aliasing, and other artifacts are just electrical signals the computer can't process correctly. Just today I was having to scan at the edge of the magnet bore, and the computer has a really tough time encoding signals at that extreme of a gradient. The fat saturation was abysmal, and there was signal cut off. The scanner ran frequency encoding pre-scans for like 2 minutes trying to figure it out, and even then there were issues. It's a challenge, but it sure isn't boring!

  • @billyidolman4666
    @billyidolman4666 Před 7 měsíci

    How is it possible to a phase encoding gradient and not have that also create a frequency encoding gradient?

    • @radiologytutorials
      @radiologytutorials  Před 7 měsíci +3

      Whilst the phase encoding gradient is on it is essentially creating a difference in frequencies along the slice. However, when the gradient is switched off all the spins now precess at the same frequency because the only magnetic field is the main magnetic field. The spins now have different phase but the same frequency. This differs from the frequency encoding gradient because we apply that gradient whilst reading the signal - therefore these frequency differences will be in our data. Hope that helps 🙂

    • @billyidolman4666
      @billyidolman4666 Před 7 měsíci

      took me a few times reading it over but that now makes sense, ty@@radiologytutorials

    • @billyidolman4666
      @billyidolman4666 Před 7 měsíci

      basically its the on and off of the gradients thats key. Putting it on does change the frequencies along the Y-axis AND keeps the phases and then the turning off stores the phase but the frequencies all realign as they are experiencing a uniform magnetic field. Did I get this right?@@radiologytutorials

  • @tractorpoodle
    @tractorpoodle Před 5 měsíci

    I think I need to buy knitting needles to understand this one :)

  • @Jacob-ye7gu
    @Jacob-ye7gu Před 8 měsíci +1

    k space doesnt have time as an axis

    • @Jacob-ye7gu
      @Jacob-ye7gu Před 5 měsíci

      @@johnnysilverhand1733 k space is a frequency and phase domain. the output is decomposed into signal from each point in cartesian space

    • @Jacob-ye7gu
      @Jacob-ye7gu Před 5 měsíci

      @@johnnysilverhand1733 thats only due to the time for relaxation of hydrogen atoms and local magnetic field effects avoided by not scanning evetything at once. the time component is not fundamental to the signal. without those factors, if we made the phase encoding steps 500ms, 5000ms, or 1 hour apart it will look the same as long as nothing in that region changed significantly