View Full Version : Regarding MRI's


chillin
10-21-2003, 10:29 PM
What do you generally see used in clinical practice T1 weighted or T2? And what are the advantages of one over the other.

Whisker Barrel Cortex
10-22-2003, 06:53 AM
Actually, both T1 and T2 are pretty much performed on every scan. I don't think I've seen one without the other. There are also many other techniques (proton density, FLAIR, STIR, FATSAT, etc) that are often used depending on the body part and clinical question at hand.

As for the advantages of one over the other, there are two many clinical uses and body parts to answer this broad question. In general, T1 is better for visualizing anatomy and T2 for pathology (this is VERY general).

Santiago
10-24-2003, 11:00 PM
Originally posted by Whisker Barrel Cortex
Actually, both T1 and T2 are pretty much performed on every scan. I don't think I've seen one without the other. There are also many other techniques (proton density, FLAIR, STIR, FATSAT, etc) that are often used depending on the body part and clinical question at hand.

As for the advantages of one over the other, there are two many clinical uses and body parts to answer this broad question. In general, T1 is better for visualizing anatomy and T2 for pathology (this is VERY general).

We were also told the same thing but my personal feel is that T1 is great for paths too.Lots of time T1 shows the path better.But as you said ..very general observation..

Regards

bosky
10-26-2003, 08:41 PM
I'm just a researcher at this point, but I think Diffusion is superior to T1 and T2 for most things, especially at higher fields (3T and beyond). If we ever make it to "very" high fields clinically (e.g. 7-8 T), T1 and T2 contrast practically disappear.