Nuclear Associates
76-907 and 76-908
AAPM MRI Phantoms
Users Manual
March 2005
Manual No. 38616
Rev. 3
©2003, 2005 Fluke Corporation, All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
All product names are trademarks of their respective companies
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Table of Contents
Section 1:
1.1
General Information................................................................................... 1-1
Introduction.................................................................................................. 1-1
Phantom Description.................................................................................... 1-1
3D Resolution and Slice (3DRAS) Phantom (Model 76-908) ................. 1-2
Uniformity and Linearity (UAL) Phantom (76-907).................................. 1-4
1.2
1.2.1
1.2.2
Section 2:
2.1
Operations.................................................................................................. 2-1
Phantom Preparation................................................................................... 2-1
Signal Producing Solution ...................................................................... 2-1
Filling the Phantom................................................................................. 2-1
Preparation for Scanning ............................................................................. 2-2
Positioning the Phantom......................................................................... 2-2
Scanning Parameters............................................................................. 2-2
Tests with 3D Resolution and Slice (3DRAS) Phantom............................... 2-2
Resonance Frequency ........................................................................... 2-2
Signal-To-Noise Ratio ............................................................................ 2-3
High-Contrast Spatial Resolution ........................................................... 2-3
Slice Thickness ...................................................................................... 2-4
Slice Position and Separation................................................................. 2-4
Example Images..................................................................................... 2-5
Tests with Uniformity and Linearity (UAL) Phantom .................................. 2-10
Image Uniformity .................................................................................. 2-10
Spatial Linearity (Distortion) ................................................................. 2-10
Image Artifacts ..................................................................................... 2-11
Action Criteria....................................................................................... 2-12
Example Images................................................................................... 2-12
2.1.1
2.1.2
2.2
2.2.1
2.2.2
2.3
2.3.1
2.3.2
2.3.3
2.3.4
2.3.5
2.3.6
2.4
2.4.1
2.4.2
2.4.3
2.4.4
2.4.5
i
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General Information
1
Introduction
Section 1
General Information
1.1 Introduction
This user's manual describes a set of MRI phantoms that were manufactured based on the AAPM
recommendations and their use in measuring the MRI system performance. These phantoms were
designed to measure them conveniently and quickly. The AAPM recommended image parameters
described in this document are:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Image uniformity
Resonance frequency
Slice position/separation
Spatial linearity
Phase related image artifacts
Signal-to-noise
Slice thickness
Spatial resolution
This set of parameters is measured for monitoring the sensitivity and geometric characteristics of MR
imaging clinical systems as specified in the AAPM document.
Two phantoms were designed to meet the AAPM specifications. This manual describes a set of test
procedures associated with the phantoms that can be used to evaluate the performance of clinical
magnetic resonance imaging systems. These procedures and tests, which are described in the AAPM
document, can be used to establish absolute performance standards as well as routine quality assurance
programs.
The manual does not include procedures to measure any T1, T2, or proton density, because at the
present time there are no commonly accepted standard methods for determining T1, T2, and proton
density from image data and because the assessment of these parameters is not currently a part of
clinical practice.
1.2 Phantom Description
AAPM specifications provide a framework of requirements for MRI phantoms and their use, but it defines
neither how phantoms should be constructed nor how inserts are to be organized. The AAPM MR
Phantoms take into consideration a number of factors that maximize convenience and time efficiency for
the user. The phantoms were designed to provide maximum amount of information in a reproducible
manner with the shortest data acquisition time.
The set consists of two phantoms: a three dimensional resolution and slice (3DRAS) phantom and an
uniformity and linearity (UAL) phantom
1-1
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1.2.1 3D Resolution and Slice (3DRAS) Phantom (Model 76-908)
The 3DRAS phantom has outer dimensions of 6" x 6" x 5" (Figure 1-1). Six resolution inserts and slice
thickness 4 ramp sets were placed inside of the rectangular box to allow image acquisition in any one of
the three directions (sagital, coronal, and transaxial) without repositioning the phantom.
Outer Shape 6" X 6" X 5" Cubical Box
Figure 1-1.
3DRAS Phantom
The resolution section (Figure 1-2) has square holes of 0.5 mm, 0.75 mm, 1.0 mm and 2.0 mm side
dimensions. The spacing between the holes is equal to their side dimensions. The holes are precisely
parallel to each other and are ¾” long. Square holes are used rather than drilled cylindrical holes because
square holes can be manufactured more precisely than cylindrical holes.
Resolution Block Detail - 2 Required
0.75 x 0.75 mm
1.0 x 1.0 mm
2.0 x 2.0 mm
0.5 x 0.5 mm
1”
2 ¼ “
½”
Not to scale
Figure 1-2.
Resolution Block Detail
A set of two resolution sections are positioned perpendicular to each other (Figure 1-3) in three imaging
planes (sagital, coronal, and transaxial). Two sections are used per imaging plane since the spatial
resolution of MR images can be asymmetric between the encoding and frequency (read-out) direction.
1-2
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General Information
Phantom Description
1
#1
Filling Hole ( ¼”)
2 mm Gap
Resolution Block
W/Horizontal Holes
Resolution Blocks
#4
#2
Resolution Blocks
w/Vertical Holes
Slice Thickness
Block Groups (4)
1 mm Gap
#3
Box Dimension of the Box 6: x 6:
Walls are Made with ¼” Material
Figure 1-3.
Resolution Sections in Three Imaging Planes
The slice-thickness phantom consists of two crossed thin ramps (Figure 1-4).
Figure 1-4.
Slice Thickness Phantom
Triangular blocks make 4" x 4" square with diagonal gaps of 1 or 2 mm. Four triangular blocks are glued
with 1 mm or 2 mm gap.
1-3
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A ramp-crossing angle of 90° yields an angle of 45° between the ramp and the imaging slice plane. Each
slice thickness section consists of four triangular blocks arranged to form (signal producing) hot ramps
filling the gaps of 1 mm or 2 mm (Figure 1-5).
Slice Thickness Measurement Gaps
Gaps are 1 mm or 2 mm Throughout
Figure 1-5.
Slice Thickness Sections
The ramps of the 1 mm gaps (forming diagonal lines) are glued at the opposite side inner wall of the
3DRAS phantom. Two sets of ramp sections are included in the phantom in order to allow the slice
thickness measurements in all three dimensions.
In a single multi-slice scan, the user can obtain images for signal-to-noise ratio, resolution in two
directions, slice thickness, and slice-to-slice gap.
1.2.2 Uniformity and Linearity (UAL) Phantom (76-907)
The UAL phantom has outer dimensions of 13" x 13" x 4" (Figure 1-6) with a small bubble (Figure 1-7)
filled with a solution attached on the surface of the phantom. A rectangular shape was adopted for ease
of reproducible positioning. Two parts of the phantom, flood and grid, are incorporated into one.
1-4
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General Information
Phantom Description
1
MR Phantom for Spatial Linearity, Signal-To-Noise, and Image Artifact
Glue
Glue
Linearity Grid, Light Cover
13”
Glue,
Glue
Glue
Not To Scale
13”
Figure 1-6.
UAL Phantom
MRI Phantom for Spatial Linearity, Signal-To-Noise, and Image Artifact
Glue Glue
Glue
3/16” Wall
¼” Wall
Glue
1”
Glue
13”
Flood Section
Two Grids Stacked
Not to Scale
Glue
Glue
4”
Figure 1- 7.
UAL Phantom with Side View
1-5
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The flood phantom has a uniform solution, the image of which can be used to measure the uniformity in
signal intensity in the images. The grid section consists of grids that can be used to assess geometric
linearity.
A small pancake shaped container holding producing solution is attached on the diagonal surface of the
phantom. It is used to detect phase errors.
1-6
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Operation
Phantom Preparation
2
Section 2
Operation
2.1 Phantom Preparation
The phantoms can be shipped filled with solutions or solutions can be shipped separately. Each user can
also prepare a solution.
2.1.1Signal Producing Solution
At each operating field strength, AAPM recommends that the chosen NMR material should exhibit the
following characteristics:
100 msec < T1 < 1200 msec
400 msec > T2 > 50 msec
proton density = H2O density
One of the following solutions is suggested as a signal producing solution. It should be noted that
relaxation times are both temperature and field strength dependent. The relaxation rates (inverse of
relaxation times) are approximately linear with ion concentration.
Agent
Concentration
T1
T2
CuS04
NiC12
1-2SmM
1-25mM
0-100%
0.1-1mM
860-40 msec
806-59 msec
2134-217 msec
982-132 msec
625-38 msec
763-66 msec
485-72 msec
--
Propanediol
MnC12
2.1.2Filling the Phantom
Degassed water should be used to make MR solution. Water can be degassed by boiling and cooling.
The following amount of water should be prepared:
Cubical Phantom: 4,000 cc/4 liters
Flood Phantom: 12,000 cc/12 liters
Once the solution has been prepared, it is recommended that several drops of wetting agent be added to
reduce surface tension and that some hydrochloric acid be added as a fungicide. As the solution is
poured into the phantom one should watch for air bubbles, especially any trapped in the resolution
section. It is recommended that the phantom be placed in a vacuum chamber for several hours to remove
the trapped bubbles.
2-1
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2.2 Preparation for Scanning
2.2.1 Positioning the Phantom
The 3DRAS phantom can be placed in a head coil or a body coil. The center of the phantom should
coincide approximately with the center of the RF coil. The UAL phantom can be used only with a body
coil.
2.2.2 Scanning Parameters
For all measurements, scan conditions should be carefully recorded. Scan conditions records should
include:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Any image processing which may have been used
Field-of-view or zoom factor
Image matrix size
Imaging coil
Number of signal (excitation) acquisitions
Phantom and phantom material
Pulse sequence name or code and software version number
RF power settings
Scan timing parameters (TE, TI, TR)
Slice excitation order
Slice number and thickness
Tuning parameters
2.3 Tests with 3D Resolution and Slice (3DRAS) Phantom
2.3.1 Resonance Frequency
Resonance frequency is defined as that RF frequency (f) which matches the static B-field (Bo) according
to the Larmor equation. For protons, the Larmor frequency is 42.58 MHz/Tesla, e.g., for a 1.5 Tesla
system, the resonance frequency should be 63.87 MHz.
Prior to the performance of any imaging protocol, the resonance frequency must be checked first.
Changes in the resonance frequency reflect changes in the static magnetic field (B-field). Changes in the
B-field may be due to superconductor "run down" (typically on the order of 1 ppm/day, e.g., about 60
Hz/day at 1.5 Tesla), changes in current density due to thermal or mechanical effects, shim-coil changes,
or effects due to external ferromagnetic materials.
The effects of off-resonance operation relate primarily to a reduction in image signal-to-noise. Secondary
effects are reflected in image linearity due to the summation of the image gradients with the inconsistent
static B-field value.
It is recommended that a resonance frequency check be performed prior to any measurements and each
time a different phantom is used.
The phantom is positioned in the center of the magnet (with all gradient fields turned off) and the RF
frequency is adjusted by controlling the RF synthesizer center frequency to achieve maximum signal.
Some resistive systems may also allow adjustment of the magnet current in order to alter the magnetic
field strength so as to achieve resonance. Most vendors will provide a specific user protocol for
2-2
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resonance frequency adjustment and some may be completely automated. Resonance frequency should
be recorded daily for trend analysis.
Values of resonance frequency should generally not deviate by more than 50 ppm between successive
daily measurements.
2.3.2 Signal-To-Noise Ratio
The signal is defined as the mean pixel value within the region-of-interest minus any pixel offset. Noise is
defined as the random variations in pixel intensity. Images with obvious artifacts are not suitable for
signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) determinations.
Factors contributing to variations in signal-to-noise include:
(I) General system calibration (resonance frequency, flip angles)
(2) Slice thickness
(3) Coil tuning
(4) RF shielding
(5) Coil loading
(6) Image processing
(7) Scan parameters (TR, TE)
(8) T-1 and T-2 solution values
When using large volume fluid-filled phantoms, it should be recognized that thermal and mechanically
induced motions can introduce artifacts. The unloaded coil allows the evaluation of system noise that is
the parameter of interest. In a clinical scan, it is recognized that the patient is the dominant source of
noise. In order to approximate the clinical situation, the coil must be electrically loaded by using an
appropriate filler material.
The signal is measured using a ROI that contains at least 100 pixels or 10% of the area of the signal
producing material, whichever is greater. The ROI should be positioned in the center of the image and
should not include any obvious artifacts. The signal is the mean value of the pixel intensity in the ROI
minus any offset. (An indication of the existence of an image intensity offset may be gained from an
examination of intensity values from ROl's taken over non-signal producing portions of a phantom.
Specific offset values should be obtained from the system manufacturer). The noise is the standard
deviation derived from the same ROI. The signal-to-noise ratio is then calculated.
2.3.3 High-Contrast Spatial Resolution
High contrast spatial resolution is a measure of the capacity of an imaging system to show separation of
objects when there is no significant noise contribution. High contrast spatial resolution for MRI systems is
typically limited by pixel size (field-of-view divided by the sampling in x or y). Traditionally, resolution has
been quantified by the point spread function (PSF), line spread function (LSF), or modulation transfer
function (MTF); however, these methods are not practical for routine measurements. Therefore, a visual
evaluation of test objects is used.
Factors contributing to high-contrast resolution include:
•
Field-of-view (determined by gradient strength, acquisition matrix, sampling period), and image
reconstruction and display method.
•
The image will be evaluated visually. Image analysis consists of viewing the image to determine the
smallest resolvable hole array (magnification may be used if desired). For an array to be resolved, all
holes and spaces must be displayed as separate and distinct then viewed with the narrowest window
width. The window level should be adjusted for optimum visualization.
2-3
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•
The high contrast resolution should remain constant for repeated measurements under the same
scan conditions and should be equal to the pixel size. For example, for a 25.6 cm field of view with a
256 x 256 acquisitions matrix, the resolution should be 1 mm.
2.3.4 Slice Thickness
Slice thickness is defined as the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of a slice profile. The full width at
tenth maximum (FWTM) is an additional descriptor of the slice profile. The slice profile is defined as the
response of the magnetic resonance imaging system to a point source as it moves through the plane of
the reconstruction at that point.
Factors Affecting Slice Thickness include the following:
(1) Gradient field non-uniformity
(2) RF field non-uniformity
(3) Non-uniform static magnetic field,
(4) Non-coplanar slice selection pulses between excitation and readout gradient
(5) TR/T1 ratio
(6) RF pulse shape and stimulated echoes
Any typical multi-slice acquisition may be used provided TR is greater than 3T1 of the filler material and
the highest pixel resolution is used. Slice thickness should be measured both centrally and peripherally
within an image and at both central (magnet isocenter) and offset slice locations.
High signal ramps (HSR) at 90 degrees to each other are used for slice thickness measurement. The
ramps have 1 mm gaps on one side and 2 mm gaps on the opposite side
Slice thickness (FWHM, FWTM):
In the resultant image, the signal level is read out across the ramp on a pixel-by-pixel basis along a line-
of-interest oriented orthogonally to the ramp width dimension. As noted previously, to assure adequate
S/N, it may be necessary to either use multiple excitations or several line profiles. The FWHM or FWTM
parameters should be determined for each of the dual ramps. The FWHM from imaging opposed high
signal ramps oriented at a 45 degree angle with respect to the image plane is equal to the square root of
the product of a and b where a and b are the FWHM of the intensity profile of ramps I and 2.
Assuring adequate measurement accuracy, the measured value of slice thickness should generally agree
with the indicated slice thickness within the 1 mm for slice thicknesses greater than 5 mm.
2.3.5 Slice Position and Separation
Slice position is the absolute location of the midpoint of the FWHM of the slice profile. Slice separation is
the distance between any two-slice positions. Slice locations are indicated by external positioning devices
or by the selected inter-slice spacing.
Factors Affecting Slice Position/Separation
(1) Misalignment of positioning devices
(2) Gradient field non-uniformity
(3) B-1 non-uniformity
(4) Non-coplanar slice selection pulses
(5) Static magnetic field
The midpoint of the FWHM of the slice profile in the image of interest is determined. The distance from
the profile midpoint to a landmark that remains stationary from slice-to-slice (parallel to the slice selection
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direction) is measured and related to the slice position. For a 45° ramp, the distance from a centered
reference pin to the slice profile midpoint will be equal to the point of the ramps located at the isocenter.
All measurements should be made along the line made up of the magnet isocenter and the centers of the
imaging planes.
Comparison of external position marker should generally agree with the actual slice position within +2
mm. Slice separation disagreement should typically be less than 20% of the total slice separation or
whichever is greater.
2.3.6 Example Images
Figures 2-1 through 2-12 represent examples of images obtained using the phantom in a 1.5 T MR
system.
Figure 2-1 is an axial image with imaging parameters of TR=60 msec, TE=22 msec and slice thickness of
3 mm. This axial image from a body coil shows resolution holes of 2 mm, 1 mm, and 0.75 mm well
resolved. There are two sets of holes shown in vertical and horizontal directions. The resolution image
can be viewed in a zoom mode. Thin vertical lines from the resolution pin within two black blocks are
placed in other orientations and have no meaning in axial orientation.
Figure 2-1.
On the right and left-hand sides of the phantom image two sets of horizontal short lines are shown. They
represent the slice thickness image of hot ramps sandwiched between two cold ramps. The thinner set is
from the 1 mm ramp and the thicker set comes from the 2 mm ramp. A set of two crossed ramps are used
as shown in Figure 1-4.
It should also be noted that the gap between the slice thickness lines on the left side of the figure is larger
than that on the right, indicating that the phantoms were not placed properly in the MRI system. In a
proper setting the gaps should be identical on both sides.
2-5
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Figures 2-2 and 2-3 represent two adjacent sagital views of the phantom. The resolution holes are well
resolved in vertical and horizontal direction and the two slices are 6 mm apart (SP = 14.5 and 20.5). The
slice thickness images of short vertical lines on top and bottom of the phantom image again are from the
crossed hot ramps of 2 mm (top) and 1 mm (bottom).
Figure 2-2.
Figure 2-3.
2-6
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Figures 2-4 and 2-5 show two adjacent coronal views of the phantom. The slice thickness lines of 1 mm
ramps on the right and bottom of the images are too faint to be seen.
Figure 2-4.
Figure 2-5
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Figure 2-6 shows a resolution hole image against a background less opaque than in previous images,
indicating that the position of the resolution block is such that it is partially covered by the slice. For
resolution measure, it is advised to use a slice that covers the central portion of the slice hole section.
Figure 2-6
2-8
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Figures 2-7 and 2-8 show an example of the slice thickness measurement analysis. A signal intensity
profile is drawn vertically through a set of slice thickness ramp Images. The profile is the slice thickness
profile. One can also obtain the slice thickness by measuring full width half maximum of the profile. Figure
2-8 represents the same data using a larger zoom factor.
Figure 2-7.
Figure 2-8
2-9
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2.4 Tests With Uniformity and Linearity (UAL) Phantom
2.4.1 Image Uniformity
Image uniformity refers to the ability of the MR imaging system to produce a constant signal response
throughout the scanned volume when the object being imaged has homogeneous MR characteristics.
Factors Affecting Image Uniformity include:
(1) Static-field inhomogeneities
(2) RF field non-uniformity
(3) Eddy currents
(4) Gradient pulse calibration
(5) Image processing
Any typical multi-slice acquisition may be used provided the signal-to-noise ratio is sufficiently large so
that it does not affect the uniformity measurement. Adequate signal-to-noise may be insured by either
increasing the number of acquisitions (NEX) or by applying a low-pass smoothing filter. In practice, it has
been found that a signal-to-noise ratio of 80:1 or greater will yield good results.
For pixels within a centered geometric area that encloses approximately 75% of the phantom area, the
maximum (S max) and minimum (S min) values are determined. Care should be taken to not include
edge artifacts in the ROI.
A range (R) and mid-range value S are calculated as follows:
R = (S max- S min) /2
S = (S max+ S min) / 2
The relationship for calculating integral uniformity (U) is:
U = (1 – (R/S)) x 100%
Perfect integral uniformity using this relationship is when U = 100%
In some cases (e.g., low-field imaging) signal-to-noise may be a limiting factor in the measurement of
image uniformity. To help minimize the effect of noise on the measurement the image may be convolved
with a 9-point low-pass filter.
For a 20 cm field-of-view or less, the uniformity should be typically 80% or better. It should be realized
that for larger fields-of-view, the uniformity may diminish. Image uniformity in the above context is not
defined for surface coils.
SNR results are only applicable to the specific system, phantom and scan conditions. It is important to re-
emphasize that the signal and noise measurements are dependent on essentially all scan parameters
and test conditions. SNR should be normalized to voxel size for comparison.
2.4.2 Spatial Linearity (Distortion)
Spatial linearity describes the degree of geometrical distortion present in images produced by any
imaging system. Geometrical distortion can refer to either displacement of displayed points within an
image relative to their known location, or improper scaling of the distance between points anywhere within
the image.
The primary factors that introduce geometrical distortion in MR imaging are:
(1) Inhomogeneity of the main magnetic field
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(2) Non-linear magnetic field gradients
Variability is best observed over the largest field-of-view. The phantom should occupy at least 60% of the
largest field-of-view. Figure 1-1 provides an illustration of a pattern that is used to evaluate spatial
linearity.
Consideration should be given to determining the spatial linearity for a typical multi-slice acquisition with
the largest available image matrix to maximize spatial resolution. Since NMR imaging is inherently a
volumetric imaging technique, the evaluation should be performed for each orthogonal plane to define the
useful imaging volume. Spatial linearity is not expected to depend significantly on image timing
parameters such as TE, TR, and the number of signal acquisitions.
Percent distortion = (true dimension -observed dimension) / true) x 100%
Distortion measurement may be performed between any two points within the field-of-view, provided that
pixel-resolution is not a significant source of error. It is recommended that the true dimension be greater
than 10 pixels. Spatial linearity measurements performed directly on the image-processing unit will
provide information only about the MR imaging system. Measurements can also be performed upon
filmed images and will provide combined performance information about the MR imager, as well as the
video and filming systems.
Percent distortions in the linearity are generally acceptable if they are less than 5%.
2.4.3 Image Artifacts
Phase related errors are defined in terms of inappropriate (either increased or decreased) image signal at
specified spatial locations. Generally, these artifacts are characterized by increased signal intensity in
areas that are known to contain no signal producing material. Commonly called "ghosts," the application
of phase-encoding gradients for imaging and errors in both RF transmit and receive quadrature phase,
result in unique ghost artifacts. A "DC-offset" error is defined here as high-intensity or low-intensity pixels
at the center of the image matrix due to improper scaling of low-frequency components (typically DC) in
the Fourier transformation of the NMR time domain signal.
(1) Phase encoding gradient instability
(2) Quadrature phase maladjustment in the synthesis of slice selective RF pulses (transmit error)
(3) Improper quadrature phase decoding on receive
Any typical multi-slice sequence may be used. Separate scans must be made to assess both transmit and
receive errors if a phantom similar to the phantom in Figure 1-5 is used. More complex volume phantoms
may be designed which both transmit and receive errors and may be assessed with a single scan
sequence. The scan for assessing receive quadrature errors is made with the phantom placed at the
magnet isocenter with the central slice of the multi-slice sequence passing through the phantom. The
same scan may be used to assess both DC-offset and phase encoding errors. The scan for assessing
transmit quadrature errors is made with the phantom placed at a convenient offset slice position (typically
either + or - S cm from the isocenter slice) with the center slice passing through the magnet isocenter and
an offset slice passing through the phantom.
Phase Encoding Errors: Phase-encoding ghosts will appear as multiple images (possibly smeared into a
column) originating at the true object position but displaced along the phase-encoding axis of the image
(perpendicular to the frequency encoding direction). The presence of these characteristic ghost images
will generally identify the two axes; however, the orientations should be verified by the manufacturer or
the operator’s manual. Regions-of-interests values are taken from both the true image and the brightest
ghost image. The magnitude of the error (E) is quantified by expressing the ghost ROI value (G) as a
percent of the true ROI (T):
E = ((T-G)/T) x 100%
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DC-Offset Errors
DC-offset errors typically appear as a single bright pixel (sometimes as a dark pixel if overflow or
processing has occurred) at the center of the image matrix. The existence of this error is assessed
visually.
Receive Quadrature Errors
Receive quadrature ghosts will be evaluated using the central slice of the multi-slice sequence acquired
with the phantom at the isocenter. Receive ghosts will appear upside down and reversed from the true
signal producing objects (object in the upper left-hand corner will appear as a ghost in the lower right-
hand corner). Regions-of-interest values are taken from both the true image and the ghost image. The
receive Quadrature Error (E) is quantified by expressing the ghost ROI value (G) as a percent of the true
ROI (T).
E = ((T-G/T) x 100%
Transmit Quadrature Errors
Transmit quadrature ghosts are evaluated using images acquired in the multi-slice mode in which the
phantom is placed at a location offset from the isocenter. A transmit ghost appears in the slice located in
the opposite offset direction at a distance equal to the distance at which the true object is located from the
isocenter (mirror image from the isocenter). The ghost and true object image will be located at the same
relative positions in their respective images. For example, a true object located in the upper left comer at
a distance of +5 cm from the isocenter will produce a transmit quadrature ghost in the upper left comer of
the image at -5 cm ROl's taken over the true object and the ghost are used to determine the percent error
(E).
E = ((T-G)/T) x 100%
2.4.4 Action Criteria
Phase related errors should typically be less than 5% of the true signal value. DC-offset errors should not
be present in images from a properly functioning system.
2.4.5 Example Images
Figure 2-9 is an image of the linearity section of the phantom demonstrating the non-linearity that exists in
the magnetic field especially on the outer edge of the field of view. Three black squares are markers for
phantom orientations.
2-12
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Operation
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Tests with Uniformity and Linearity (UAL) Phantom
Figure 2-9
2-13
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Nuclear Associates 76-908 & 76-907
Operators Manual
Figure 2-10 is a flood image showing the uniformity of signal intensity. Field non-uniformity is also shown
on the outer edges.
Figure 2-10
Figure 2-11 shows a horizontal intensity profile with a narrow window setting. Such information can be
used as baseline data.
Figure 2-11
2-14
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Operation
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Tests with Uniformity and Linearity (UAL) Phantom
Figure 2-12 is an image of the signal bubble for quadrature error. If there were any quadrature phase
error, another ghost circle would be visible in the lower right-hand corner of the image. Quadrature error
has become less common in most of the recent MRI systems.
Figure 2-12
2-15
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