To develop and validate a novel noncontrast time-resolved magnetic resonance angiography (NC TR-MRA) using consecutive beam pulses with variable flip angles for visualizing hemodynamics in the pulmonary artery, we performed phantom and volunteer studies and applied the novel NC TR-MRA to a 51-year-old woman with pulmonary arteriovenous malformation (PAVM).The novel NC TR-MRA sequence utilized consecutive multiple-beam saturation pulses with variable flip angles considering venous blood T1 relaxation to alter the visualized blood signal length. The flowing blood signal length is suppressed according to the number of beam saturation pulses. NC TR-MRA in each flow phase was assessed by subtracting the images with and without beam saturation pulses. In the flow phantom study, three flow velocities were used to simulate physiological pulmonary arterial blood flow. Signal profiles along the flow direction were evaluated in each flow phase. In the volunteer study, five healthy volunteers were recruited, and NC TR-MRA was applied to evaluate relationships between the flow-saturated time and signal enhancement rates. Four regions of interest (ROIs) were determined on the proximal and distal portions of the right basal artery. A patient with PAVM was included to validate whether a PAVM lesion could be visualized using NC TR-MRA. The visualized flow signal lengths extended proportionally with the number of beam saturation pulses in the steady-flow phantom at all velocities. In the volunteer study, NC TR-MRA images showed signal enhancement from the proximal to distal portions of the right basal artery with increase in the flow-saturated time. Signal enhancement rates in all ROIs were significantly positively correlated with the flow-saturated time (p < 0.001 in all ROIs). Further, the lesion and its hemodynamics could be explicitly visualized in the patient with PAVM. Hence, NC TR-MRA using beam saturation pulse can visualize the hemodynamics of the pulmonary artery and may be useful for diagnosing and following patients with PAVM.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mri.2022.09.001 | DOI Listing |
Health SA
December 2024
Department of Radiography, Faculty of Health Science, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa.
Background: The consequence of non-compliance with patient radiation safety standards increases unnecessary radiation exposure with high chances of harmful biological effects. Radiographers are trained to prevent these harmful effects by enforcing radiation protection, which is achieved through proper techniques, equipment, shielding materials and beam collimation.
Aim: The study aimed to explore compliance with radiation protection by radiographers in Eswatini public health facilities (PHFs).
Dynamic transverse mode instability (TMI) has become one of the primary limitations for power scaling of high-power fiber lasers. Experimental evidence has shown that static mode degradation can suppress the dynamic TMI effect. This study reveals the physical mechanisms behind the mitigation of dynamic TMI in two-mode fiber lasers through static mode degradation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Elect Propuls
December 2024
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA.
A previous companion paper introduced a current pathways model that represents the electrical coupling between the Hall effect thruster (HET) and the ground-based vacuum test facility operational environment. In this work, we operated a 7-kW class HET at 4.5 kW, 15 A and 6 kW, 20 A on krypton to quantify aspects of the current pathways model to characterize the role metal vacuum chambers play in the thruster's discharge circuit as a function of discharge current.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Oral Health
December 2024
School/Hospital of Stomatology, Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Hangzhou, China.
Objective: A preliminary clinical evaluation of the efficacy, comfort, and adverse reactions of two mandibular advancement devices (MADs) in the treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA).
Methods: Forty patients with mild-to-severe OSA were recruited and randomly divided into two groups. They were treated with Shark-fin or Silensor MAD, respectively.
Reverse saturation of absorption is a relatively rare phenomenon in light-matter interaction, as it requires a few conditions to be fulfilled. We observe that ruby exhibits a very strong reverse saturation of absorption at 473 nm. Furthermore, we measure the group velocity of a modulated laser beam in ruby and observe that the peaks of the pulses appear more than a hundred microseconds earlier than the reference signal.
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