K-Space Formulation of MRI
K-Space Formulation of MRI
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This article reviews in an easily accessible way the application of the universal concept of K-space to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
and NMR microscopy (branches of nuclear magnetic resonance or NMR). There is a tendency among students of MRI to consider K-space
as something difficult to grasp. This is unjustified since K-space actually enormously simplifies the systematic exposition and comprehension
of most data acquisition and evaluation methods used in MRI and in NMR microscopy.
Unlike most introductory texts on K-space, this Note contains all the required math and provides an in-depth explanation of why K-space is
so important, not just how it looks and feels. Despite the rigour, the required background includes only the most elementary knowledge of the
principles of NMR and an introductory-level knowledge of Fourier Transform.
Started in 2005, this document is subject to further development through the addition of links to other documents and/or web sites and
additions to the References. Interested readers are invited to come back every few months to check on the progress.
Notes added on November 23, 2007:
(i) Many readers find it a bit difficult to grasp the nature of the artificial field gradients, particularly the fact that what is denoted here as G is
the gradient of the z-component of a magnetic field which is always parallel to the main field but whose magnitude varies linearly along any
desired direction in space.
(ii) Another uncertainty that keeps cropping up is related to the complex nature of NMR and MRI data; people ask how and when do the data
become complex and how comes that non-quadrature MRI can ever work.
These non-trivial points merit a separate note which I promise to write before the year is over.
I. Definition of K-space
Suppose that a physical quantity w(r) is distributed within a region V of space. For simplicity we assume that the region V is finite and that w(r)
is integrable over V (to a large extent, these conditions may be made less stringent but that is beyond the present point).
Applying Fourier transform, it is then possible to define the following complementary distribution W(k):
(1)
Here k denotes a complex vector composed of three components and dr a volume element (some prefer to write dV). The dot product k.r
between r = {x,y,z } and k = {kx,ky,kz} is defined as
(2)
It is therefore evident that the distribution W(k) is defined in the linear vector space of three-dimensional complex vectors k, called the
K-space, which is covariant (complementary) to our ordinary Euclidean R-space.
The two distributions w(r) and W(k) carry exactly the same information. Under a very broad range of circumstances, in fact, knowing W(k), the
function w(r) can be computed from
(3)
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discipline.
The notation adopted here is not unique. Many authors prefer to drop the 2π factors in the exponents in equations (1,2) in favor of angular
frequency ω. In such a case, however, factors containing 2π re-appear within normalization factors in front of the integrals. For the purposes of
our discussion, it is irrelevant which convention is used.
In the above formulae we have defined the 3-dimensional K-space corresponding to a 3-dimensional R-space. However, it is evident that,
starting with any Euclidean space of n dimensions (n = 1, 2, 3, ...), one can extend the definition to a corresponding n-dimensional K-space.
The case of n = 2 is very common in MRI in connection with techniques which pre-select a sensitive planar slice of the imaged object (likewise,
it is possible to select a sensitive line and thus reduce the dimensionality to n = 1). It is well known that when spectroscopic aspects are
involved, the chemical shift s can be handled as an independent dimension. The math of spectroscopic MRI therefore extends up to 4D spaces
with 4D vectors {x,y,z,s}. In what follows we shall stick to normal 3D and 2D R-spaces and the corresponding K-spaces, keeping in mind that
all qualitative features of what shall be discussed are valid regardless of the chosen dimensionality space.
The physical dimension of the k-vectors of any K-space is always [m-1] rather than [m] of the R-space position vectors r (m stands for meter,
the unit of length). This is why K-spaces are also called reciprocal spaces.
The mathematical concept of K-space turns out to be extremely useful in a number of very diverse fields of physics. The roots of such
universal usefulness can be traced to two fundamental facts:
(a) The entity w(r) can be any physical property, as long as it is possible to associate it with a distribution in space. It does not even need to
be scalar - vectors, matrices and the like are all welcome. Thus in X-ray scattering w(r) stands for the electron density distribution within a
material, while in NMR it is primarily the local density of the observed nuclides (we will return to this point later).
(b) In many physical experiments, the observed signals can be described in a much simpler way in the K-space than in the physical
R-space. We shall see in the next Section that this applies also to the signals observed in MRI.
where f is the Larmor frequency of the nuclides and the factor q(r) is primarily proportional to the local density ρ(r) of the observed nuclides.
When a suitable preparatory sequence is used, however, it can be made to depend also on the relaxation times T1(r) and T2(r) and on the
diffusion coefficient D(r), all intended as local properties at point r. The customary interpretation of the three factors in equation (4) is
straightforward and, for the purposes of this exposition, we take it for granted. Notice, however, that we neglect chemical shift effects and
consider the apparent decay rate of transversal magnetization R2* as independent of the position vector r.
When the signal component dS(t) is passed through the phase detector of an MRI scanner, the effect is to subtract from f a fixed, operator-
defined reference frequency F. The difference Δf = f-F is in the audio-frequency range and is called the RF offset of the signal component,
which is now described by the equation
(5)
In the absence of field gradients, one can choose F in a way to have Δf = 0 for all voxels of a sample (the on-resonance condition). However,
when we apply a generic field gradient G, the Larmor frequencies of different voxels spread according to the formula
(6)
with γ being the gyromagnetic ratio expressed in Hertz per Tesla [Hz/T]. We need to take into account also the fact that, in general, the
gradient G is time-dependent. The Larmor frequencies of equation (6) must be in this case interpreted as immediate angular velocities of the
magnetization vector and thus also of the signal phase evolution rate. Consequently, the total accumulated signal phase Φ(t) at time t is given
by the integral
(7)
Substituting equation (7) into equation (5) and rearranging the terms, we obtain
(8)
where
(9)
The total signal S(t) at the output of the receiver is the integral of the contributions dS(t) arising from all voxels of the imaged object:
(10)
Comparing equation (10) with equation (1), one discerns a certain similarity, broken only by the presence of the factor describing the
magnetization decay due to the transversal magnetization and by the fact that the vector K(t) is time-dependent. We will now temporarily
neglect the decay term, assuming that during the experiment it remains approximately equal to its initial value of 1. Then
(11)
where, according to equation (1), Q(k) denotes the K-space transform of q(r).
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(12)
Equation (11) shows that the receiver signal S(t) can be interpreted as the value of Q(k) along the K-space path K(t).
Notice that:
a) The path K(t) depends on time t as a parameter.
b) Since, by equation (9), K(0) = 0, the path K(t) always starts at the origin.
c) Along the path, the signal cam be digitally sampled to provide a set of data points describing the Q(k) surface.
Note that, apart from condition (b), the path K(t) is under full experimental control.
From equation (9) one obtains, in fact,
(13)
where G(t) = |G(t)| is the absolute value of the imposed field gradient and g(t) = G(t)/G(t) its direction vector (both may be time-dependent).
The equation indicates that the evolution rate of K(t) (both its absolute value and its direction) is at any moment proportional to the gradient
vector G which leads to the following picture:
After the excitation preamble of an MRI pulse sequence, one departs from the origin of the K-space and, using the gradients, moves
along any desired K-space path as though flying an easily maneuverable rocket. Along the way, one builds up a record of the Q(k)
values for a subset of the visited K-space points.
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Let us now take a sphere of radius R, full of water, place it at the center of
our scanner and see what kind of K-space image we obtain. We know in
advance that the image will have a spherical symmetry and, using Eq.(1),
we can compute its radial behavior. In this particular case, the imaginary
component of the [ideal] signal turns out to be null, while the real
component shows a massive central hill surrounded by relatively modest
oscillating circular rims. When we plot the normalized shape function
against the normalized distance ζ=2πRk, we end up with the same curve
for spheres of any size. The graph on the right (Figure 2) shows the
shape function for 3D images of spheres, 2D images of discs and 1D
images of rods.
The distance normalization to ζ=2πRk means that the smaller is the
sphere and the further into the periphery spreads its K-space image (tiny
R, large k). Vice versa, a large sphere has its K-space image all peaked
close to the origin (large R, tiny k). This falls in line with the general
pattern according to which fine-grained details of an R-space image (its
effective resolution) are encoded in the peripheral K-space regions, while
slow-rolling R-space features are encoded within the central K-space
areas. MRI data evaluation software exploits this fact to play sensitivity or
resolution enhancement tricks with the images by weighing in different
ways the central regions against the peripheral and/or intermediate ones.
One might suspect that the importance of the center of the K-space image
arises from the fact that we have placed the sphere at the center of the
scanner. It is easy to show, however, that this not so. Let us take an object (no matter what), place it into the scanner and acquire its K-space
image, then translate it along a vector d, acquire the new image and see how the two images W(k) and W'(k) differ. From Eq.(1) one obtains
(14)
showing that |W'(k)| = |W(k)| since W(k) and W'(k) differ just by a d-dependent factor which happens to be a complex unity. In other words,
translating the imaged object does not modify the magnitudes of the K-space image! What changes is only the balance between the in-phase
(real) and out-of-phase (imaginary) K-space components at different points. Likewise, one can easily show that rotating the whole R-space
leads to a closely related rotation of the K-space image about its origin and thus, again, does not affect the importance of the central region.
Hopefully, this has given you some feeling for the inner workings of the K-space. Though we have talked just about spheres dislocated in
various ways in the R-space, you should consider the fact that any body, however complex, can be well approximated by a sufficiently large
number of sufficiently small spheres and that the signals coming from all those spheres are additive.
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prescription.
Compared with projection reconstruction, FT imaging assigns more weight to the
K-space periphery leading to a much better resolution of fine details, achieved at the
price of somewhat lower signal/noise ratio (S/N ratio). Given the uniform coverage
density of the Cartesian grid, one can also easily show that the corresponding
reconstruction algorithm gives a unique R-space solution with no potential uncertainties.
One expects these advantages to apply to any uniform coverage of the K-space. In two
dimensions one can in fact conveniently resort to a hexagonal, honeycomb grid for
which there exist reconstruction algorithms just as fast as FFT.
In its original version, Cartesian grid sampling appears to be better suited for multi-shot
approaches. Nevertheless, many single-shot modifications exist and are in current use.
An example of such a single-shot Cartesian grid strategy is the rectangular spiral path
shown in Figure 6. One could also use an octagonal spiral covering the same Cartesian
grid and hexagonal spiral paths covering honeycomb-like grids. All paths of this kind represents a hybrid between FT imaging and the spiral
path strategies to be discussed in the next paragraph.
Spiral imaging:
The spiral sampling pattern shown in Figure 7 relies on relatively novel spiral reconstruction algorithms. For simplicity, we have not shown
the individual sampling points which are supposed to be distributed at equidistant intervals along the path. In its original version, the radius of
the spiral increases linearly with time, the cartographer moves along the path at a constant speed (meaning constant gradient amplitude) and
the signal is sampled at a constant rate.
The result is a two-dimensional, single-shot approach with good coverage of the K-space peripheral regions and therefore a good resolution. In
its basic version described above, it has also the advantage of considerable technical simplicity. What varies during the scan is just the
gradient direction and even that does so in a very smooth way. This reduces to minimum the requirements on the dynamic characteristics of
the gradient generators.
As one might expect, a vast multitude of alternatives to the simple spiral had been proposed. Spiraling paths in fact lend themselves
particularly well to fancy modifications. One can play with polygonal spirals, vary in fancy ways the pitch of the spiral and/or the data sampling
rate, find interesting ways of exploiting the K-space symmetry, etc.
Given the overall good performance of the spiral charting strategies, they constitute at present the fastest growing category. Taking into
account the growing accent on single-shot, fast MR imaging (MRI angiography and cardiology), it is likely that spiral-like strategies will
eventually completely replace the historic projection- and FT- techniques. In this context, notice that, if need be, a single-shot method can be
always used in a multi-shot manner, while the reverse is not true.
There is a lot of on-going work dedicated to finding new and ever faster reconstruction algorithms in 2, 3 and even more dimensions. One even
starts hearing about algorithms applicable to arbitrary K-space sampling patterns. That may be an exaggeration since arbitrary is definitely too
arbitrary, but it gives one an idea about what are the MRI mathematicians doing these days. In any case, we can expect that, at least from the
point of view of sampling strategies, the life of K-space cartographers is going to become ever easier.
Advanced strategies
In the rest of this Section, reserved for the really curious readers who like to know a few little extras, I will try and explain why the idea of nearly
arbitrary sampling patterns is, after all, not so haphazard. Consider the following discrete equivalent of equation (3), rewritten for the quantities
q(r) and Q(k) in equation (12):
(15)
The integral form of the equation is what theory requires in order to assure a perfect reconstruction. With a finite number of available K-space
data, however, integrals can only be approximated. The discrete form on the right, based on a plain summation over the available data points
(m=1,2,3,...,N), can be viewed as one such approximation (albeit a rather primitive one). This gives rise to the ubiquitous question of how well
can one estimate the value of q(r) using only a limited number of K-space readings.
Though it is not easy to give an universal answer to this mathematical problem, empirical practice shows that, once the K-space symmetry is
taken into account, a relatively sparse coverage pattern is enough to produce surprisingly good results. Not only is this true but one obtains
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reasonable R-space maps even when only limited portions of the K-space are densely covered. There is a deep analogy between the K-space
images and holographs. Like in the case of a holograph, a splinter of the K-space image still contains quite a lot of the information required to
recover the original R-space map.
The summation formula underlines also the fact that the reconstruction is actually a very simple process. Given a fixed position r in the
R-space, every K-space reading of the form {k,Q(k)} contributes to q(r) by a product of Q(k) with the simple complex-unity factor exp(2πik.r).
Imagine, therefore, that we choose a grid of fixed R-space points (pixels or voxels) and assign a simple processor to each of them. Now every
time we take a k-space reading, we communicate the datum to all the processors who, in parallel, execute the simple calculation required to
update the R-space map. With such a multi-processor image reconstruction device, the R-space image is being built in real time and keeps
improving even while we are still flying paths in the K-space.
Moreover, it now does not particularly matter whether our K-space data are arranged according to a rigid, pre-defined pattern or not. As long as
we keep track of our position in the K-space, any reading is a welcome piece of information and helps to improve the reconstructed R-space
map. If efficiency were not a problem, one could even acquire R-space maps from data collected by a completely drunk cartographer flying
through the K-space along totally random paths.
Thanks to recent technological advances, in particular the availability of low-cost, high-capacity field-programmable gate arrays (FPGA), real-
time reconstruction devices employing large arrays of simple processors running in parallel are becoming an affordable alternative to
large CPU's. This technological revolution is still in its early stages, but there is no doubt that it is going to have a large impact on MRI and all
but eliminate the need to stick to the old-fashioned single-processor 'fast' reconstruction algorithms.
where R2* is the apparent transverse decay rate, inverse of the more-often used apparent relaxation time T2*.
The decay rate in equation (16) contains a number of contributing terms such as the transversal relaxation time, flow effects, self-diffusion
effects, spin-coupling effects and - last but certainly not least - the extra de-phasing rate of the signal due to magnetic field inhomogeneity over
the whole sample volume. Since the latter term usually dominates, the value of R2* does not vary much from point to point and equation (10) is
usually well approximated by
(17)
Even when such approximation is reasonable, the transient character of the NMR signal still represents a vexing problem for our K-space
cartographer who now has to map an area in which whole ranges of mountains periodically flicker into existence and then decay into a
dull plain. Evidently, this leaves him with no time to spare and introduces a number of logistic and computational problems. One needs
charting strategies which, apart from the paths to follow, carefully take into account the times needed to cover them.
We shall now discuss a few aspects of this problem. Some of these aspects border on research topics and thus exceed the scope of this Note.
Nevertheless, the following generic reflections may be essential for those readers who want to understand not just the principles of the
K-space description but also its limitations and practical applicability.
Speedy charting
One possible approach to the difficult task of charting transient landscapes is to do the job so fast that the decay can be neglected. When the
whole charting job is done in a time period Δt such that the decay factor (16) remains close to 1 during the whole charting process, it can be
neglected and one can proceed exactly as we have done in preceding Sections. This, however, is easier to say than to do. There are two types
of objections to such an approach.
The first category of objections is purely technical. Whatever charting strategy is used, the faster we wish to move through the K-space, the
more powerful 'motors' we need. In our case, this means more powerful, responsive and reproducible dynamic field gradient generators
(including the gradient coils and the respective current sources). This translates into high equipment costs and high average power
consumption (operating costs). To stay with our analogy, if you wish to move real fast, a Ferrari may be still too slow; what you need is an
executive jet, but then you have to pay for it.
The technological limits become even more stringent when one is after single-shot charting strategies. To obtain a reasonably dense chart of
the whole K-space following a single path, the latter must be necessarily very long and curvy and, in order to be reproducible, also very
precise. If, in addition, the job must be done in a short time, this implies speeds and maneuverability considerably superior to whatever might
be acceptable for multi-scan strategies.
The second category of objections has more to do with physics. For reasons of very fundamental physical nature, NMR is always
characterized by a relatively low signal-to-noise ratio (limited sensitivity). It is therefore imperative to collect all the available signal and not
throw away any of it. Which, however, is exactly what we are doing when trying to finish the charting before any appreciable decay takes place.
Once we have finished, there is still a lot good signal but we ignore it just because it has already decayed a bit and we are too lazy to
complicate our lives by accounting for the decay in our evaluation algorithms.
Another aspect which is closely related to the sensitivity problem is the sampling rate. According to a Nyquist theorem, the required receiver
bandwidth is equal to the rate at which one samples the signal. Fast sampling implies large receiver bandwidth which, in turn, implies more
receiver noise (the variance of the latter is proportional to the bandwidth). Consequently, the combined effect of reducing the charting times
and, consequently, increasing the sampling rates brings us eventually to a situation where the quality of the recovered images becomes totally
unacceptable.
Slowing the decay
If the decay is such a problem, are there not ways to get rid of it or, at least, slow it down? The answer is there are, though they may be costly
and work only up to a certain point. We have said that the decay is usually dominated by the magnetic field inhomogeneity over the whole
imaged volume. There are two ways how such an inhomogeneity can be reduced:
(1) Building more homogeneous magnets and, just as important, making sure that the environment in which they are installed does not
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compromise their homogeneity. However, better homogeneity is a technological challenge and its solutions come at a cost. Thus a magnet with
3 ppm (part-per-million) inhomogeneity over a certain volume may cost several times more than one with 30 ppm over the same volume.
Apart from the costs, there are also intrinsic limits to this approach. The imaged objects are normally very heterogeneous (this is certainly the
case with human bodies) and thus, due to magnetic susceptibility differences between their constituent parts, generate induced magnetic field
inhomogeneity of the order of a few ppm even in perfectly homogeneous external magnetic fields.
(2) Reducing the imaged volume. The smaller is the imaged area, the smaller is the field inhomogeneity across it and, as an extra bonus, the
fewer data points are needed to chart it. These are the two reasons for using local RF coils which pick up only signals arising from a limited
area of a larger body. Hence the existence - and the often excellent performance - of local coils for limbs, shoulders, spine, cervix, rectum,
prostate, testicles, eyes, etc, etc.
One can take this approach a step further. If we could split the whole imaged volume into smaller compartments, each monitored by its own
pick-up coil, we might end-up with a composite image of the whole volume and a quality corresponding to the size of the partial volumes. Due
to the nonlinear, exponential behavior of the decay term (16), this leads to very substantial gains in quality and/or reductions of total scanning
time and lies behind the idea of using arrays of local coils, each with an independent receiver channel.
Numeric corrections
There is one rather obvious thing one can do while evaluating the acquired data. To the extent to which the decay rate in equation (16) is
independent of position and equation (17) is justified, it can be accounted for and corrected a-posteriori. All we need to do is to
(a) a-priori estimate the decay rate and
(b) while charting the K-space, complement each reading with the time at which it has been taken (starting from take-off at t=0).
This technically simple modification (time readings are among the most simple ones to take) leads to data triplets of the form {k,Q'(k),t} in
which Q'(k) is the partially decayed value of Q(k). When t and R2* are known, it is then elementary to recover Q(k):
(18)
Compared with what we have called plain speedy charting, inclusion of time in data logs and usage of equation (18) can help to extend the tiny
time windows useful for K-space charting by a factor of two to three which, when all numerical estimates are made, may amount to almost
tenfold reduction of the total scanning time needed to obtain an image of a given quality.
Beyond that, however, things start getting worse rather than better. The reason is that the correction factor in equation (18) is always greater
than one and grows exponentially with the elapsed time t. Consequently, it not only corrects the decay but also amplifies the receiver noise.
As we push equation (18) to ever longer times t, therefore, there comes a point where further improvements in artifacts become marginal while
the noise starts getting out of hand.
Decay versus apodization
One can ask what would happen to the final R-space images if one simply ignored the presence of the decay factor (16). It so happens that the
answer to that question depends a lot upon adopted K-space charting strategy. Before giving the actual answer, however, we need to introduce
a widely used data-evaluation concept.
We have already mentioned the fact that the reconstruction software can play with
the relative weights of the central, intermediate and peripheral regions of the
K-space in order to modulate R-space signal-to-noise ratio and/or resolution. In
general, this is done by multiplying the K-space image by a function f(|k|) which
depends only upon |k| but not upon its direction. The process is known as K-space
weighing or K-space apodization and corresponds closely to an analogous
procedure routinely used in NMR spectroscopy as well as a number of other fields,
unrelated to NMR. Figure 8 shows three typical apodization functions and gives a
clue about their effects.
Returning to the decay factor (16), we notice that, combined with some of the
K-space charting strategies, it affects the K-space image in a way similar to an
exponential apodization function f (like the black one in Fig.8). This is exactly the
case, for example, when applying the multi-scan projection-imaging and, to a good
approximation, when using one of the spiral strategies. In such cases, the general
effect is an extra suppression of the peripheral K-space signal and thus a reduction
in spatial resolution. Unlike a-posteriori exponential apodization, the suppression of
peripheric signals is not accompanied by any noise reduction and therefore does
not improve the image signal-to-noise ratio. The only consolation is that, in these
relatively lucky cases, the effect at least does not introduce any image artifacts.
Unfortunaley, there are many K-space charting strategies in which the decay factor
affects the data in an a-symmetric way. In the case of the multi-shot FT imaging
shown in Figure 5, for example, the apodization effect due to the decay is much
more pronounced along the X-axis than along the Y-axis. Such a-symmetries are
bound to generate fastidious artifacts in the R-space images (single/multiple ghost
images, smeared images, ...). In particular, one must avoid strategies in which the
effective decay-induced apodization function might contain any sharp discontinuities.
In most cases (certainly all the 2D ones) it is possible to correct the decay artifacts by repeating the whole data acquisition several times,
rotating each time the whole K-space image by an angle and properly summing together all the partial data. For example, the multi-shot
Fourier-transform data acquisition can be repeated rotating the whole charting pattern by 90 degrees and then summing the two distinct signal
values obtained for each data point. This removes the X/Y a-symmetry leaving just a modest eight-fold azimuth angle dependence.
Symmetrization procedures of this type are very effective and lead to efficient artifact suppression once at least a four-fold symmetry can be
guaranteed. Exploiting the inversion symmetry of the whole K-space, the four-fold symmetry can be reached with just two scans (4 scans for
an eight-fold symmetry etc).
Exploiting pulse echoes
The ideas of the preceding Section can be taken one step further by an ingenious exploitation of gradient echoes. For example, one can
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mitigate the differences due to signal decay along a path by backtracking it and summing the readings taken at the same points but at different
moments. In this way, it is possible to modulate in many various ways the effective apodization function due to the decay factor (16). Since the
decay factor is dominated by static field inhomogeneity, however, and since the latter is not refocused by gradient echoes, the overall total loss
of signal intensity is always the same. One can at best distribute it in different ways among different areas of K-space but not remove it.
Moreover, the static field inhomogeneity is a-specific in the sense that it is mostly a characteristic of the instrument and not of the imaged
subject. The signal decay therefore can not be exploited to obtain any knew contrasts between tissues. On the opposite, whatever differences
there might be, it tends to mask them and thus attenuate contrasts in the final R-space images.
On the other hand, we know from Section 4 that pulse echoes do remove the static field
inhomogeneity. This means that, for example, the pulse echo shown in Figure 3b should
be substantially stronger than the gradient echo of Figure 3a. It turns out that not only is
this indeed so, but the intensity of the refocused echo decays with a rate which, after the
removal of the dominant a-specific term, depends upon intrinsic characteristics of the
imaged tissues, such as the transversal relaxation rates and water diffusion coefficients.
This explains why pulse echoes are of extreme importance in MRI. They help us
combat the field inhomogeneity and, at the same time, give us the possibility of
introducing new, tissue-specific factors into the acquired images.
Since this treatise has become much longer than what I had initially in mind, however, I am
not going to pursue this topic much further. The reader can by now imagine that there are
hundreds of clever schemes of incorporating the pulse echoes into the K-space charting
process. Perhaps the best thing is to conclude with a single, slightly fancy example
illustrating one of the almost infinitely many ways how the pulse echoes can be used.
Though I do not think anybody is using this method yet, it should be pretty good.
Figure 9 shows what is essentially a single-shot, spiral path, except for the fact that the
lower half-plane lobes of the spiral are replaced by spin-echo warps. To assure proper
refocusing while maintaining constant charting speed, a little timing trick needs to be
added. If we index the lobes 1,2,3, ... (starting from the innermost ones), we insert a small,
constant time delay before starting to traverse the odd lobes, while no such delay is
applied to even lobes. The purpose is to make identical, for every single k, the time
needed to complete lobe 2k and 2k-1. In this way static field inhomogeneites get refocused
within every pair of lobes and the overall signal decay is dominated by the much slower
transversal relaxation rate (plus any diffusion effects).
7. Concluding remarks
The reader who has followed this exposition should know quite a lot about how MRI images are formed. This, however, is only one aspect of
MRI. We have not talked about the actions which need to be taken before the acquisition of MRI data can start. In particular, this includes
- preparation of nuclear magnetization (preparatory pulse sequence),
- nuclear magnetization excitation by a suitable RF pulse (non-selective, selective, profiled), and
- sensitive manifold pre-selection (plane, multi-plane, line).
The three tasks are closely related and often intricately interconnected. They are achieved by means of suitable RF pulse and field-gradient
sequences. In this respect, too, MRI is characterized by an amazing multitude of choices which affect, often quite strongly, the nature of the
imaged quantity q(r) and the way it depends upon all the parameter at play (spin density, longitudinal and transverse relaxation times, diffusion
and flow). The theories behind these aspects of MRI experimental techniques were not discussed because they are of more traditional NMR
nature and rarely invoke the K-space concepts. For the same reason, we have just listed some of the phenomenological features of pulse
echo, avoiding any in-depth explanations.
I have refrained from a systematic exploration of all possible combinations of K-space charting strategies, image reconstruction schemes and
of the many ways of using gradient and spin echoes. Apart from the fact that the total number of potentially interesting approaches is
staggering, I doubt whether, at present, a systematic review is possible (or even makes sense), since many technical aspects of the problem
(such as the massive parallel processing techniques) are still in rapid evolution.
I have also omitted the discussion of motional and other artifacts and flow effects. Likewise, I have skipped the k-space description of those
MRI techniques which employ heavy RF pulse trains during data acquisition (such as steady-state free precession and pseudo-stochastic
methods). The discussion of such topics within the k-space formalism, though still convenient, assumes aspects which go beyond an
introductory exposition. Those interested in such topics should look them up in the references listed below and consult the original literature.
Naturally, many special aspects of K-space were just barely mentioned, avoiding dozens of mathematical theorems. I have tried to stress the
inherent simplicity of the K-space description while, at the same time, letting transpire the versatility of the formalism and the staggering
number of possible solutions which make MRI still so attractive to physicists and mathematicians.
Occasionally, the exposition has been pushed up to the frontiers where active research is going on.
Hopefully, this might help a few new adepts to plot the direction of their future efforts.
References
1. Brown T.R., Kincaid B.M., Ugurbil K.,
Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.USA 79, 3523-3526 (1982).
2. Ljunggren S.,
A Simple Graphical Representation of Fourier-Based Imaging Methods,
J.Magn.Reson. 54, 338-343 (1983).
3. Twieg D.B.,
The k-trajectory formulation of the NMR imaging process with applications in analysis and synthesis of imaging methods,
Med.Phys. 10, 610-621 (1983). Building on earlier work in the field of optics; Proc.Soc.Photo-Opt.Instrum.Eng. 347, 354 (1982).
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K-Space formulation of MRI http://www.ebyte.it/library/educards/mri/K-SpaceMRI.html
Web links
The Basics of MRI, e-book by J.P.Hornak.
What is k-Space tutorial on the Revise MRI Physics site. See also their k-Space tools.
MRI physics, an exposition by LeedsCMR.
MR Technology Information Portal. Go to Database and search for K-space.
Breaking the speed limit in MRI. An article on fast imaging methods by M.S.Cohen et al.
Echo-planar imaging (EPI) and functional MRI, by M.S.Cohen.
An Improved Analytical Design for Archimedean Spirals in 2D K-Space, by M.Amann et al.
MRI on the Web. Go to Principles,K-space .
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