Thursday, July 28, 2016
How MRIs Work
For 15 years, Rose Radiology Centers, Inc., has been providing a high professional standard of imaging services to patients throughout Florida. Among its many imaging capabilities, Rose Radiology offers traditional MRIs as well as state-of-the-art open TruScan MRIs.
MRI stands for “magnet resonance imaging” and is a process by which electromagnets act in conjunction with radio waves to produce highly accurate images of body parts by stimulating protons in water and fat. Unlike CT and PET scans, MRIs do not rely on radiation. Doctors use MRIs to diagnose many illnesses, though the technology is particularly adept at producing pictures of the brain and other nervous structures.
During an MRI scan, a patient will lay on a flat surface, which is then placed inside an MRI tube. Depending on the goals of the procedure, the patient will spend anywhere from 20 to 90 minutes in the tube while technicians conduct the scan. Occasionally, patients may be administered a safe contrast agent intravenously to help improve picture quality.
For more information about MRIs, please visit roseradiology.com/mri.htm.
Friday, July 1, 2016
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) - How it Works
At Rose Radiology, a team of board-certified physicians employs state-of-the-art and traditional equipment to offer imaging and treatment services. For its patients in need of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Rose Radiology maintains two cardiovascular MRI machines as well as an upright open MRI system.
Magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, uses radio waves and magnetic fields to create detailed images of human body structures. Each MRI machine works via two large magnets, the first of which causes all water molecules in the body to align on a north or south axis. The machine then activates and deactivates the second magnet in a pulsing sequence, which causes the hydrogen nuclei in each molecule to re-align and then to relax.
These changes in alignment generate radio waves that are detectable via a specialized and highly sensitive scanner embedded in the MRI machine. The scanner can detect the different rates at which the nuclei of different body tissues re-align, and these differences allow the system to generate images that show contrast between tissue types. Such images allow physicians to identify tumors and other structural abnormalities in the human body.
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