Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

MRI Anatomy

On this page

MRI Principles - Signal Secrets

  • Core Sequences & Tissue Signals:
    • T1-Weighted (T1W): Anatomy. Fat is bright (hyperintense); water/CSF is dark (hypointense). 📌 T1: 1 thing bright (fat).
    • T2-Weighted (T2W): Pathology. Fat and water/CSF are bright. 📌 T2: 2 things bright (fat, water).
    • Proton Density (PD): High signal where proton concentration is high (e.g., brain parenchyma).
  • Key Specialized Sequences:
    • FLAIR (Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery): T2-like, but CSF signal is suppressed (dark). Highlights periventricular lesions (e.g., MS plaques).
    • DWI (Diffusion-Weighted Imaging): Shows restricted water movement. Crucial for acute stroke detection.
    • GRE (Gradient Recalled Echo) / SWI (Susceptibility Weighted Imaging): Detects hemorrhage (dark), calcification.
  • Contrast Agents:
    • Gadolinium-based: Shortens T1 relaxation time. Brightens inflamed tissues, tumors, vessels. ⚠️ Risk of Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis (NSF) in severe renal impairment.

MRI Brain Sequences: T1, T1 C+, FLAIR, T2 Comparison

  • Signal Characteristics Table:
Tissue/PathologyT1WT2WFLAIRDWI
CSFDarkBrightDarkDark
White MatterLight GreyDark GreyDark GreyGrey
Grey MatterGreyLight GreyLight GreyGrey
FatBrightBrightBrightDark
Acute HemorrhageVariableDark (oxyHb) / Bright (deoxyHb)VariableVariable
Chronic HemorrhageBright (metHb)Dark (hemosiderin)DarkDark
Edema (vasogenic)DarkBrightBrightDark
Acute Ischemic StrokeNormal/DarkBrightBrightBright
Tumor (enhancing)Dark (pre), Bright (post-Gd)BrightBrightVariable

Neuroaxis MRI - Brain & Spine Snapshots

  • Brain MRI: Key Structures & Views
    • Standard Views (Axial, Sagittal, Coronal): Identify lobes (frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital), ventricles, basal ganglia (caudate, putamen, globus pallidus), thalamus, corpus callosum, brainstem (midbrain, pons, medulla), and cerebellum.
    • Dedicated Sequences: For pituitary fossa and Internal Auditory Canals (IACs).
  • Spine MRI: Core Assessment
    • Vertebral Bodies: Check alignment and height.
    • Intervertebral Discs: Evaluate hydration (T2 bright signal) and identify herniation types (bulge, protrusion, extrusion, sequestration).
    • Spinal Cord: Assess signal intensity and morphology.
    • Neural Elements: Examine nerve roots and facet joints. Spine MRI sagittal T2 with vertebral and curvature labels

⭐ On T2-weighted images of the spine, normal intervertebral discs appear bright due to high water content; dessicated or degenerated discs lose this hyperintensity.

MSK & Body MRI - Joint & Organ Views

  • MSK - Knee:
    • Menisci (medial C-shaped, lateral O-shaped): Normal low signal. Tears: ↑ signal reaching articular surface.
    • Ligaments: ACL, PCL, MCL, LCL - assess integrity, tears (↑ signal, discontinuity).
    • Cartilage: Smooth, intermediate signal. Defects, thinning.
    • Bone marrow: Edema (↑ T2 signal), effusions (fluid signal). Knee MRI: Meniscal tear and ACL injury
  • MSK - Shoulder:
    • Rotator Cuff: Supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor, subscapularis. Tears, tendinopathy (↑ signal, thickening).
    • Labrum: Glenoid labrum tears.
    • Biceps tendon: Tenosynovitis, tears. Axial T2 Shoulder MRI: Rotator Cuff Tears
  • Basic Tissue Appearance (T1, T2, PD):
    • Muscle: Intermediate signal.
    • Tendon/Ligament: Normally dark (low signal) on all sequences.
    • Cartilage: Intermediate signal.
  • Body MRI (Basic T1/T2 Appearance & Location):
    • Liver, Spleen, Kidneys, Pancreas: Assess signal, morphology.
    • Uterus, Bladder: Pelvic anatomy; bladder shows fluid signal.
  • Common MRI Artifacts:
    • Motion: Blurring, ghosting. Cause: Patient movement.
    • Metal Susceptibility (Blooming): Signal loss/distortion near metal. Cause: Metallic implants.
    • Chemical Shift: Dark/bright bands at fat-water interfaces. Cause: Different resonant frequencies of fat/water protons.
    • Aliasing/Wrap-around: Anatomy outside Field of View (FOV) wraps into image. Cause: FOV too small.

⭐ Fluid-sensitive sequences like T2-weighted with fat suppression (T2 FS) or STIR are crucial in MSK MRI for detecting edema, inflammation, and fluid in ligamentous/meniscal tears.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • T1-Weighted (T1W): Fat is bright, water/CSF dark; excellent for anatomical detail.
  • T2-Weighted (T2W): Water/fluid bright, fat also bright; highlights pathology like edema.
  • FLAIR: CSF signal suppressed (dark); superior for periventricular lesions (e.g., MS plaques).
  • DWI: Detects acute stroke (bright) by showing restricted water diffusion.
  • Gadolinium contrast (T1W): Enhances areas of blood-brain barrier disruption (tumors, infections).
  • MRI Safety: Paramount due to strong magnetic fields; screen for contraindications (pacemakers).

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE