Strain–encoded magnetic resonance imaging
Strain–encoded magnetic resonance imaging | |
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Purpose | imaging the strain of deforming tissue |
Strain–encoded magnetic resonance imaging (SENC-MRI) is a
To use the technique, the gradient coils in the MRI equipment need to be driven with special pulse sequences, designed for specific tissues, that "tags" deformation of the tissue, such that tissue that deforms more is brighter, or darker, as needed. Using a baseline measurement of normal deformation, the measurements can show unusual amounts of pressure a tissue is exposed to, or indicate that the tissue is unusually stiff or flexible, in either case potentially revealing a pathology.[2]
Inventors of the technique, Nael Osman and Jerry Prince, co-founded a company called DiagnoSoft to get regulatory approval for software enabling this technique and others from their academic lab, and make them available to doctors and patients.[3][4][5][6]
See also
References
- S2CID 42994412.
- ^ S2CID 20634404.
- ^ Diagnosoft official website
- ^ Dave Beaudouin for Johns Hopkins Engineer. Summer 2004 Getting to the Heart of Cardiac Imaging
- ^ Deanna Pogorelc for MedCity News. April 29, 2014 In tech transfer, an idea isn’t always a product, and an inventor isn’t always an entrepreneur
- ^ Diagnosoft Press Release. January 30, 2009 Diagnosoft(R) Introduces Its Third MRI Analysis Innovation