We describe case-by-case from technical reason to countermeasures,
evaluating them on both low magnetic field (Esaote,
O-Scan) and 1.5 T magnet (Philips D-Stream).
Chemical shift (CS) artifact can be divided into type I and II.
Type I is found along the direction of frequency encoding,
only in the presence of magnetic fields (B0) > 1T.
Type II is found in any of the field intensity,
especially in Gradient Echo (GE) sequences with particular echo times.
The alteration appears as a black band or white at the interface between water and fat (Fig.
1).
CS can also be used for detection of certain type of lesion like adrenal gland mass.
The artifact increases with the increase in the intensity of B0,
but decreases with the increase of the intensity of magnetic field gradients applied.
The solutions can be managed directly from the console: the devices include a parameter that determines how many pixels can be present the CS and in which direction should occur.
Possible remedies: increase bandwidth; use TE in phase; use less subject sequences.
Free Induction Decay (FID) artifacts can appear when one or more T1 relaxation times corresponding to the tissues in the interest volume are relatively short and,
contemporary,
low flip angles are used for refocusing.
The FID signal artifact in SE sequences appear in the image as straight lines,
while in 3D FSE follows the underlying anatomy and looks like intensity undulations of the subcutaneous fat (Fig.
2).
This artifact is similar to the receiver turned on artifact (hardware and software) that also occurs in GE sequences,
where the signal from the receiver (not real) extends in the free signal region,
while the FID (real signal) is confined to the sample projection along the reading axis.
Possible solutions: increase the slope of the spoiler gradient applied to the sequence of pulses; add an average with relative increase of the acquisition time; contact support.
Field inhomogeneity artifact is characteristic of the scans at the edge of the field: when images are obtained through a progression from the center to the edge of the coil,
the homogeneity of B changes with increasing distance.
The same problem occurs if you scan at a certain distance from isocenter volume in the left-right direction,
or when using a too large Field Of View (FOV).
Similar artifacts are related to surface coils and magnetic field gradients.
The images can be noisy,
distorted (geometric distortion in EPI),
with incomplete magnetization signal and broke in SE sequences or without fat suppression (incorrect setting of the currents).
Possible remedies: use less susceptible sequences (SE and TSE); use greater FOV; oversample.
Gibbs artifact,
also known as "by truncation" or "ring" artifact,
occurs when in an image there is a sudden change of contrast,
as the interface fat / muscle or spinal cord / liquor.
In this artifact "wave fronts" at regular intervals are formed (Fig.
4).
This phenomenon takes the name of "ringing" and is derived from a sub-sampling along the direction of frequency encoding.
In the images on the left we have two different matrices: at the top 128x128 pixels,
at the bottom 256x256: note how the artifact is reduced increasing the size.
Possible remedies to reduce it is: to increase the number of stages or samples; increase the size of the matrix; perform high-resolution scans; use fat suppression techniques in T1w sequencies.
Magic angle artifact occurs in the structures rich in fibers and collagen (such as tendon and ligament structures) with lapse of 55° with respect to B0.
The water protons in these structures generally have a very low signal because of the dipolar interactions which occur in the fibers,
and that lead to a rapid dephasing of the signal.
These interactions,
however,
progressively decrease if the orientation of the fibers is close to 55° with respect to the magnet,
with an increase of the signal which could simulate a pathological area.
A typical example is the light signal present at the level of the posterior cruciate ligament,
the supraspinatus tendon and,
sometimes,
even at the level of the patella (Fig.
5).
Usually it occurs in sequences with short TE (less than 32ms,
T1,
DP,
GE) and tends to decrease if the magnetic field is 3T.
Possible remedies: increase the TE over 40 ms which leads to a deletion of the magic angle,
but also to the loss of mild inflammatory diseases.
Magnetic susceptibility artifact is caused by the presence of objects in the FOV with very high or very low magnetic susceptibility.
In the interfaces between regions with different magnetic susceptibility,
the induction field is slightly different and field gradient (inhomogeneities) are created.
The artifact is visible especially with the GE sequences and is dependent on some acquisition parameters (more evident with long TE).
The most frequently are represented by metal and cosmetics artifacts,
which do not only cause the distortion of neighboring structures but can also cause signal losses on the entire image (empty signal surrounded by hyper intense lines and spots),
depending on the technique used (Fig.
6).
Possible remedies: avoid GE sequencies; use short TE (reducing spin dephasing); employ more intense gradients; use smaller FOV,
thin layers and volumetric acquisitions.
Moiré Fringes artifact is caused by the lack of perfect homogeneity of B0 from one side of the body to another,
with reversal of the scanned volume and consequent overlapping of signals of different phases that automatically are added up and erase.
It can,
also,
be given by the interference of different echoes that fall in the same reading window.
This results in "Zebra Stripes” inhomogeneity of magnetic field,
visible at the edges of a large FOV,
especially when the patient's boundaries (eg elbows) are very close to the transmitter coil (Fig.
7).
It typically occurs when GE sequences are made with the coil body.
Possible remedies: use SE sequences; use surface coils; pay attention to shimming and gradients susceptibility.
Partial volume artifact occurs when the size of image voxel is larger than the size of the detail that it is necessary to analyze.
This results in a loss of spatial resolution.
Another manifestation of this type of artifact is the loss of contrast resolution between two adjacent tissues in an image due to poor spatial resolution.
If fat and water spins occupy the same voxel,
their signals interact and delete.
Possible remedies: reduce layer thickness; increase spatial resolution.
Gadolinium (Gd) hyperconcentration consist in a loss of signal intensity in T1w images instead of the hyperintensity that occurs when the concentration is normal.
In the blood,
in the joints and in the bladder,
often the concentration of the “contrast” could exceed a critical level in which the shortening of T2 exceeds T1,
leading to a loss of signal.
The consequence of this effect is an "artificial layering" of images,
which are unreadable .
Possible remedies: the only way to avoid this artifact is to perform the earliest possible acquisitions in order to avoid over-concentration.
Movement related artifacts represent all those artifacts that result from interactions between the equipment and the patient's body due to coding errors,
both in the phase and in the frequency (negligible) of direction.
The data in the direction of phase encoding are collected during the entire scan duration: consequently the coding error causes the data to be placed in a wrong pixels in the final image.
The movements may be voluntary or involuntary,
those represented by blood flow in the vessels or CSF flow in the ventricular cavity and the subarachnoid space,
by cardiac respiratory and peristaltic movements.
The artifacts are presented in various ways: images called "ghost" (depend on whether the raw data the “K” space are acquired alternately during inspiratory and expiratory / systolic and diastolic,
they are represented in the form of side dishes or as an image "fuzzy" homogeneously) or of type "smear" (for non-periodic movements,
characterized by continuous bands).
Possible remedies: immobilize the affected area; use the cardiac or respiratory gating; capture scans in apnea; increase the number of acquisitions; use the pre-saturation; reverse the encoding axes of phase and frequency; use gradients of the flow compensation; sequences preferred with fat saturation; use of surface coils; increase the number of average signal; Antiperistaltic medications.
Crosstalk artifact (overlap,
cross excitation) is always present when placing packets of layers that intersect and are detected in the same acquisition.
The signals of the two different layers for the same anatomical point create interference that generate empty or very low signal,
making unreadable images in those voxels.
Possible remedies: avoid overlapping of layers of packages,
or to do so in areas that are not important from a diagnostic point of view; acquire interspersed mode (mandatory in 2 batches),
not sequential; perform an acquisition (a batch) for each packet of parallel layers (expensive solution in terms of time).
Aliasing artifact (Wrap Around,
Foldover,
by tilting,
Backfolding-only parallel imaging-) is the presence in the image of a part of the examined anatomical region that is outside the FOV.
It occurs in the K-space region,
when the FOV is smaller than the affected anatomical region.
The parts of the object outside the FOV still produce a signal,
but the intensity of the applied gradients causes them to gain an upper phase and,
therefore,
the reconstruction algorithm considers them overlapped at the opposite side of the image (Fig.
11).
On modern tomographs it only occurs along the encoding phase direction,
while in those of old generation is also reported along the direction of frequency encoding.
Possible remedies: on older systems the only way to overcome the problem of aliasing was oversample the signal,
eliminating the data collected from the anatomical regions outside the FOV; in newer equipment it’s possible to use a digital filter system,
which eliminate upstream frequencies outside the range of interest or place the object of study in the center of the FOV; increase the FOV in the encoding phase direction; use of phase oversampling techniques; swap the encoding phase axis with that of the frequencies; using saturation bands only where oversampling is not possible; using algorithms capable of recognizing the overlays which exploit the different intensity received by the receiving coils placed at different points of the space (parallel imaging).
Noise artifacts from radio frequency (RF) are caused by a malfunction of the RF screen whose purpose is to avoid that the external noise can reach the detector
They are due to RF coming from the environment,
resulting not only from the radio or television signals,
but also by electric motors,
by neon lamps placed in the examination room and from the monitoring equipment of the vital functions of the patient,
if not MRI-compatible.
In general they are not present since the penetration of RF into the MRI room is prevented by the Faraday cage.
However,
some equipment dedicated to the study of the joints are constructed so that the Faraday cage is internal to the magnet.
The way in which this artifact noise occurs in the image depends on the noise source and in which part of the signal has had effect.
A receiving coil with non-uniform sensitivity causes an undesired signal change in the image known as RF inhomogeneity artifact.
Some RF coils,
such as surface coils,
have inherent sensitivity variations and almost always show this artifact,
while the presence of this artifact in other coils is synonymous with rupture of an element of the coil itself or the presence of a metal in the surveyed area.
Metal implants tend to absorb the energy of the RF and,
in this way,
nearby tissues can’t run the right flip angle: the signal will then be reduced with artifact similar to the one from magnetic susceptibility.
Both GE and SE sequences suffer the effect of RF inhomogeneity and there is no way to avoid it.
Moreover,
a distortion of RF field can cause a non-uniform fat suppression.
Possible remedies: modify automatic pre-scanning parameters in order to reduce the signal amplification factor (gain); perform a more accurate control of the transmitting elements of the RF coils (RF-shimming); post-processing methods (take too long times).
Eddy current artifact is due to eddy currents generated by magnetic field gradients and it is a potential source of B0 spatial and temporal distortion.
It is particularly frequent in the sequences using fast gradient changes,
such as EPI (Fig.
12).
Three types of distorsions are possible: contraction,
displacement and folding.
Possible remedies: eddy current compensation; gradient coils screens; contact support.
There are a group of artifacts due to hardware and software problems: the most frequent are listed below.
Central Point (DC offset) artifact appears as a bright spot in the center of the image and is given by an increase or decrease in intensity and is caused by a constant deviation of the receiver voltage.
This disorder is very common since it depends on the fluctuation of the temperature,
which cause amplification of the signal.
Possible remedies: normally is compensated by special software; make sure the temperature in the room keeps constant.
Crisscross looks like an oblique structure (herringbone) that runs through the image in any direction,
in one single or more slices.
The causes are multiple (electromagnetic surges created by gradients,
electronic equipment within the room,
AC power fluctuations).
Possible remedies: change the bulb; contact support.
N/2: the echoes belonging to the rows in even and odd position in the K-space are acquired with read echoes,
having opposite directions,
and the gradient reversal takes place between a line and the next.
Small timing errors in the sampling in relation to gradient variations can cause a modulation in the data location of alternate lines in the K-space (especially in EPI sequences).
Possible remedies: change the geometry of the sequence (increase or decrease the angle of the slice); re-shimming; reduce the TE; reduce the phase encoding resolution; Use EPI sequences multi-shot or parallel imaging.
Entry slice artifact occurs when rotations without saturation enter for the first time in one or more slices,
causing an increase in signal; it is characterized by a light signal coming from a blood vessel (artery or vein) in the first not saturated slice and is often mistaken for thrombosis in SE sequences.
Possible remedies: spatial saturation bands positioned before the first slice and after the last one; use of GE techniques are fundamental in the DD between artifact and occlusion.
Star (Feed-through) artifact,
due to RF coming from the device itself.
It is visible in T2w images or with fat signal suppression: it propagates along the direction of encoding phase.
Similar to the RF artifact,
with the difference that the intensity band of variable signal is unique,
of the size of a single pixel and passing exactly through the center of the image.
Possible remedies: Make sure that the room door is closed properly; move any mechanical-electrical equipment in the room.
Rare and unpredictable artifacts are those from hardware errors,
data damage and analogic-to-digital converter block: they can give different results,
as they are caused by calculation errors or problems in coil connection.
Possible remedies: store data to a new disk; contact support.