Terms
15.17.2 Terms
The following terms are commonly used in radiology.9
b value—The b factor or b value is associated with diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (diffusion-weighted MRI or DWI). It measures “strength (intensity and timing) of the diffusion gradient”9; units are seconds per square millimeter.
maximum b value of 1221 s/mm2
Four gradient strengths were applied, resulting in b values of 0 and 1000 s/mm2 applied sequentially in the X, Y, and Z gradient directions.
Doppler—See 15.3.6, Cardiology, Echocardiography.
echo train—A sequence of echoes. “Echo train is not a unit of measure”9 but is expressed as in these examples:
echo train length 5
echo train length 18
echo train length 16
echo train length 20
a long echo-train-length 3-dimensional fast-spin echo sequence
k-space—This term refers to mathematical space with frequency and phase as coordinates, rather than spatial coordinates.6
Our pulse sequences collected data spirally in k-space.
k-space filtering
k-space sampling
number of excitations/signals—Change “number of excitations” to “number of signals acquired” (applies to MRI).
T1, T1ρ, T2, T2*—These are types of relaxation time in magnetic resonance imaging.5,6 They need not be expanded.
T1 |
spin-lattice or longitudinal relaxation time |
T1ρ |
spin-lattice relaxation time in the rotating frame |
T2 |
spin-spin or transverse relaxation time |
T2* |
time constant for loss of phase coherence among spins |
TE, TR—Expand echo time (TE) and repetition time (TR) as in this example:
cardiac-gated repetition time (TR) greater than 2400 milliseconds; echo times (TEs), 20 and 80 milliseconds