Type of sequence |
Philips |
Siemens |
GE |
Hitachi |
Toshiba |
SE - Echo planar |
SE-EPI |
EPI SE |
SE EPI |
SE EPI |
SE EPI |
GE - Echo planar |
FFE-EPI |
EPI Perf |
GRE EPI |
SG-EPI |
FE-EPI |
The echo planar (EPI) is the fastest acquisition method in MRI (100 ms / slice), but with limited spatial resolution. It is based on:
Contrast in echo planar sequences is determined by excitation pulse and possible magnetization preparation. The various possibilities include:
To constitute the gradient echo train, a readout gradient is continuously applied, with positive and negative alternations . In the case of an alternating gradient (blipped and nonblipped EPI), k-space will be scanned from left to right and back, with each echo. At the same time, the phase encoding gradient may be permanent and constant (nonblipped) giving a zigzag global trajectory, or intermittent (blipped) at each echo onset, giving a rectilinear trajectory.
In the case of spiral k-space filling, phase encoding and readout gradients have a sinusoidal growing envelope.
In all cases, the continuous readout signal imposes k-space regularisation before the image can be reconstructed. The Fourier plane matrix values are calculated by mathematical interpolations that are more or less complex depending on the filling trajectory used.
Echoplanar sequences demand intense, high-performance gradients (for fast signal readout), with short ascent times (because of frequent gradient-switching).
The artifacts in echoplanar sequences are linked to:
Echoplanar sequences are the basis for advanced MRI applications such as diffusion, perfusion and functional imagery, to be further dealt with by chapters in the second part.