Authors
John N Oshinski, David N Ku, Roderic I Pettigrew
Publication date
1995/2
Journal
Magnetic resonance in medicine
Volume
33
Issue
2
Pages
193-199
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Description
Studies of flow in a 90%‐stenosis phantom were conducted to elucidate the parameters and mechanisms responsible for signal loss in MR angiographic images. The studies independently evaluated the effect of velocity, Reynolds number, turbulent fluctuation velocity, and turbulence intensity on the amount of post‐stenotic signal loss. Results suggested that the magnitude of the turbulent fluctuation velocity, not merely the presence of turbulence or the intensity of turbulence, was the parameter that determined the extent of the signal loss. The study suggests that future flow phantom studies should be conducted with fluids having physiologic velocities and viscosities to obtain accurate levels of turbulent fluctuation velocities and hence reproduce results of in‐vivo signal‐loss patterns. The mechanism for signal loss is that the temporal and spatial variations of the turbulent fluctuation velocity cause a range of phases …
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