Abstract
A subtractive time-of-flight technique for magnetic resonance angiography is described. In this approach, the arterial supply to an organ is inverted in a steady-state fashion by applying off-resonance irradiation in the presence of a linear magnetic field gradient. An angiogram is formed by subtracting an image acquired with arterial inversion from a control image acquired with no arterial inversion. A single coil is used to apply both the inversion and observation pulses. Intracranial angiograms obtained from normal volunteers using a two-dimensional projective implementation of this technique at 1.5 T illustrate excellent small vessel detail and background suppression.
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