In morphological cardiac MRI, the main priority is to clearly delineate the heart chambers and vascular lumen, using a “dark blood” contrast (PRESTO / dark-blood / black-blood) (figures 11.3 and 11.4). This imaging is based on spin echo sequences, in their fast and ultrafast variants, with prospective gating and diastole acquisition. « Dark blood » contrast results from the outflow effect of the moving spins in the blood, and suppression of the blood signal prior to acquisition.
Fast spin echo sequences, combined with the multiplane technique, can be carried out in breath-hold (5 to 15 seconds depending on the machine). Ultrafast spin echo sequences can acquire a slice in a single R-R interval (a heartbeat). Breath-hold is not therefore indispensable.
The blood signal is suppressed to obtain a dark blood contrast, using a double inversion preparation scheme (figure 11.5):
Nevertheless, a blood signal will persist when it is in the slice during the two inversions and during the imaging sequence (case of slow-flowing blood moving through the slice plane).