New clinical opportunities of low-field MRI: heart, lung, body, and musculoskeletal

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Abstract

Contemporary whole-body low-field MRI scanners (< 1 T) present new and exciting opportunities for improved body imaging. The fundamental reason is that the reduced off-resonance and reduced SAR provide substantially increased flexibility in the design of MRI pulse sequences. Promising body applications include lung parenchyma imaging, imaging adjacent to metallic implants, cardiac imaging, and dynamic imaging in general. The lower cost of such systems may make MRI favorable for screening high-risk populations and population health research, and the more open configurations allowed may prove favorable for obese subjects and for pregnant women. This article summarizes promising body applications for contemporary whole-body low-field MRI systems, with a focus on new platforms developed within the past 5 years. This is an active area of research, and one can expect many improvements as MRI physicists fully explore the landscape of pulse sequences that are feasible, and as clinicians apply these to patient populations.

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Tian, Y., & Nayak, K. S. (2024, February 1). New clinical opportunities of low-field MRI: heart, lung, body, and musculoskeletal. Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics, Biology and Medicine. Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10334-023-01123-w

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