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Introduction
On July 3, 1977, the first MRI exam was performed on a human being.
It took almost five hours to produce one image. Dr. Raymond Damadian,
a physician and scientist, along with colleagues Dr. Larry Minkoff
and Dr. Michael Goldsmith, labored for seven years to reach that
point. They named their original machine "Indomitable."
This machine is now in the Smithsonian Institution. As late as 1982,
there were a handful of MRI scanners in the United States. Today
there are thousands, and images can be created in seconds what used
to take hours.
The basic design of an MRI machine resembles a
cube, typically measuring 7 feet tall by 7 feet wide by 10 feet
long, although new models are rapidly shrinking. There is a
horizontal tube running from front to back through the center of the
machine which houses an extraordinary strong magnet. This tube is
known as the bore of the magnet. The patient, lying on his or her
back, slides into the bore on a special table. Whether or not
the patient goes in head first or feet first, as well as how far in
the magnet they will go, is determined by the type of exam to be
performed. MRI scanners vary in size and shape, and newer or
specially designed models have some degree of openness around the
sides, but the basic design is the same. Once the body part to
be scanned is in the exact center or isocenter of the magnetic
field, the scan can begin.
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. It then
integrates all of this information together to create 2-D images or
3-D models.
MRI provides an unparalleled view inside the
human body. The level of detail we can see is extraordinary compared
with any other imaging modality. MRI is the method of choice
for the diagnosis of many types of injuries and conditions because
of the incredible ability to tailor the exam to the particular
medical question being asked. By changing exam parameters, the
MRI system can cause tissues in the body to assume different
appearances. This is very helpful to radiologists who read
MRIs in determining if something seen is normal or not. MRI
systems can also image flowing blood in virtually any part of the
body. This allows us to perform studies that show the arterial
system in the body, but not the tissue around it. In many
cases, the MRI system can do this without a contrast injection,
which is required in vascular radiology.
Magnetic Intensity
The biggest and most important component in an MRI system is the
magnet. The magnet in an MRI system is rated using a unit of measure
known as a tesla. The magnets in use today in MRI are generally in
the 0.5-tesla to 3.0-tesla range.
Safety
Prior to allowing a patient or support staff member into the scan
room, he or she is thoroughly screened for metal objects.
Often however, patients have implants inside them that make it very
dangerous for them to be in the presence of a strong magnetic field.
People with pacemakers cannot be scanned or even go near the scanner
because the magnet can cause the pacemaker to malfunction. Aneurysm
clips in the brain can be very dangerous as the magnet can move
them, causing them to tear the very artery they were placed on to
repair. Some dental implants are magnetic. Most orthopedic
implants, even though they may be ferromagnetic, are fine because
they are firmly embedded in bone. Even metal staples in most
parts of the body are fine -- once they have been in a patient for a
few weeks, enough scar tissue has formed to hold them in place.
Each time we encounter patients with an implant or metallic object
inside their body, we investigate thoroughly to make sure it is safe
to scan them. There are no known biological hazards to humans from
being exposed to magnetic fields of the strength used in medical
imaging today. Most facilities prefer not to image pregnant
women.This is due to the fact that there has not been much research
done in the area of biological effects on a developing fetus.The
decision of whether or not to scan a pregnant patient is made on a
case-by-case basis with consultation between the MRI radiologist and
the patient's obstetrician.
The Magnets
There are three basic types of magnets used in MRI systems:
- Resistive magnets consist of many windings or
coils of wire wrapped around a cylinder or bore through which an
electric current is passed. This causes a magnetic field to be
generated. If the electricity is turned off, the magnetic field
dies out. These magnets are lower in cost to construct than a
superconducting magnet (see below), but require huge amounts of
electricity (up to 50 kilowatts) to operate because of the
natural resistance in the wire.
- A permanent magnet's magnetic field is always
there and always on full strength, so it costs nothing to
maintain the field. The major drawback is that these magnets are
extremely heavy. They weigh many, many tons at the 0.4-tesla
level. A stronger field would require a magnet so heavy it would
be difficult to construct. Permanent magnets are getting
smaller, but are still limited to low field strengths.
- Superconducting magnets are by far the most
commonly used. A superconducting magnet is somewhat similar to a
resistive magnet -- coils or windings of wire through which a
current of electricity is passed create the magnetic field. The
important difference is that the wire is continually bathed in
liquid helium at 452.4 degrees below zero. This almost
unimaginable cold causes the resistance in the wire to drop to
zero, reducing the electrical requirement for the system
dramatically and making it much more economical to operate.
Superconductive systems are still very expensive, but they can
easily generate 0.5-tesla to 3.0-tesla fields, allowing for much
higher-quality imaging.
A very uniform, or homogeneous, magnetic field of
incredible strength and stability is critical for high-quality
imaging. It forms the main magnetic field. Magnets like those
described above make this field possible.
Another
type of magnet found in every MRI system is called a gradient
magnet. There are three gradient magnets inside the MRI machine.
These magnets are very, very low strength compared to the main
magnetic field; they may range in strength from 180 gauss to 270
gauss, or 18 to 27 millitesla (thousandths of a tesla).
The main magnet immerses the patient in a stable
and very intense magnetic field, and the gradient magnets create a
variable field. The rest of an MRI system consists of a very
powerful computer system, some equipment that allows us to transmit
RF (radio frequency) pulses into the patient's body while they are
in the scanner, and many other secondary components
Understanding the Technology
The MRI machine applies an RF (radio frequency) pulse that
is specific only to hydrogen. The system directs the pulse toward
the area of the body we want to examine. The pulse causes the
protons in that area to absorb the energy required to make them
spin, or precess, in a different direction. This is the
"resonance" part of MRI. The RF pulse forces them (only
the one or two extra unmatched protons per million) to spin at a
particular frequency, in a particular direction. The specific
frequency of resonance is called the Larmour frequency and is
calculated based on the particular tissue being imaged and the
strength of the main magnetic field.
These RF pulses are usually applied through a
coil. MRI machines come with many different coils designed for
different parts of the body: knees, shoulders, wrists, heads, necks
and so on. These coils usually conform to the contour of the
body part being imaged, or at least reside very close to it during
the exam. At approximately the same time,
the three gradient magnets jump into the act. They are arranged in
such a manner inside the main magnet that when they are turned on
and off very rapidly in a specific manner, they alter the main
magnetic field on a very local level. What this means is that
we can pick exactly which area we want a picture of. In MRI we
speak of "slices." Think of a loaf of bread with slices as
thin as a few millimeters -- the slices in MRI are that precise. We
can "slice" any part of the body in any direction, giving
us a huge advantage over any other imaging modality. That also
means that you don't have to move for the machine to get an image
from a different direction -- the machine can manipulate everything
with the gradient magnets.
When the RF pulse is turned off, the hydrogen
protons begin to slowly return to their natural alignment within the
magnetic field and release their excess stored energy. When
they do this, they give off a signal that the coil now picks up and
sends to the computer system. What the system receives is
mathematical data that is converted into a picture that we can put
on film. That is the "imaging" part of MRI.
Visualization
Most imaging modalities use injectable contrast, or dyes, for
certain procedures. MRI is no different.
MRI contrast works by altering the local magnetic
field in the tissue being examined. Normal and abnormal tissue
will respond differently to this slight alteration, giving us
differing signals. These varied signals are transferred to the
images, allowing us to visualize many different types of tissue
abnormalities and disease processes better than we could without the
contrast.
The fact that MRI systems do not use ionizing
radiation is a comfort to many patients, as is the fact that MRI
contrast materials have a very low incidence of side effects.
Another major advantage of MRI is its ability to image in any plane.
CT is limited to one plane, the axial plane (in the loaf-of-bread
analogy, the axial plane would be how a loaf of bread is normally
sliced). An MRI system can create axial images as well as
images in the sagitall plane (slicing the bread side-to-side
lengthwise) and coronally (think of the layers of a layer cake) or
any degree in between, without the patient ever moving. If you
have ever had an X-ray, you know that every time they take a
different picture, you have to move. The three gradient
magnets discussed earlier allow the MRI system to choose exactly
where in the body to acquire an image and how the slices are
oriented.
Advantages
MRI is ideal for:
- Diagnosing multiple sclerosis (MS);
- Diagnosing tumors of the pituitary gland and
brain;
- Diagnosing infections in the brain, spine or
joints ;
- Visualizing torn ligaments in the wrist, knee
and ankle;
- Visualizing shoulder injuries ;
- Diagnosing tendonitis ;
- Evaluating masses in the soft tissues of the
body ;
- Evaluating bone tumors, cysts and bulging or
herniated discs in the spine; and
- Diagnosing strokes in their earliest stages.
Disadvantages
Although MRI scans are ideal for diagnosing and evaluating
a number of conditions, it does have drawbacks as follows:
- There are many people who cannot safely be
scanned with MRI (for example, because they have pacemakers);
- The machine makes a lot of noise during a scan.
The noise sounds like a continual, rapid hammering.
Patients are given earplugs or stereo headphones to muffle the
noise (in most MRI centers you can even bring your own cassette
or CD to listen to). The noise results from the rising
electrical current in the wires of the gradient magnets being
opposed by the main magnetic field. The stronger the main
field, the louder the gradient noise;
- MRI scans require patients to hold very still
for extended periods of time. MRI exams can range in
length from 20 minutes to 90 minutes or more. Even very
slight movement of the part being scanned can cause very
distorted images that will have to be repeated; and
- Orthopedic hardware (screws, plates, artificial
joints) in the area of a scan can cause severe artifacts
(distortions) on the images. The hardware causes a
significant alteration in the main magnetic field.
The Future of MRI
The future of MRI seems limited only by our imagination. This
technology is still in its infancy, comparatively speaking. It has
been in widespread use for less than 20 years (compared with over
100 years for X-rays).
Very small scanners for imaging specific body
parts are being developed. Functional brain mapping (scanning
a person's brain while he or she is performing a certain physical
task such as squeezing a ball, or looking at a particular type of
picture) is helping researchers better understand how the brain
works. Research is under way in a few institutions to image
the ventilation dynamics of the lungs through the use of
hyperpolarized helium-3 gas. The development of new, improved ways
to image strokes in their earliest stages is ongoing. |