



Handbook of MRI Scanning: 9780323068185: Medicine & Health Science Books @ desertcart.com Review: Great MRI reference - This is a great reference book that is so far unique in the collection of MRI books out there as a spiral-bound have-next-to-the-scanner book. The next nearest book out there is Handbook of MRI Technique , though this book is much more detailed in both sequences and specific anatomy areas. This book lists out the common pulse sequences for both 1.5T and 3T, and also displays basic scan plane prescriptions. There are also line drawings of the anatomy of interest, similar to the drawings found in Sectional Anatomy for Imaging Professionals . There is also valuable information found at the beginning of each chapter which describes some of the rationale for some of the PSD selection, coils, contrast, artifacts, etc... The charts in the book list actual parameters and imaging options for each sequence, with an additional blank chart in each section meant for reader to write in their own site's standard sequences. With customized saved protocols in most scanning software, I question how useful the blank tables are, other than for general sequence listings. In future editions of this book, I would like to see a column for "Frequency direction" with it filled in as A/P, R/L, S/I. The listed "SPF swap phase & freq" can still be ambiguous and sometimes coil dependent. Other improvements I would make would be graphical views of sat band positions, listing of an estimated scan time per sequence, and also a brief discussion on the use of options like ZIP2, ZIP512, sequential, etc... Also, a flag for scans which are meant typically for a breath-hold would be nice. Overall, this book is great for anyone learning MRI as a tech, or for someone coming from a research/physicist background and needs to learn the anatomy-specific scan protocols. An experienced expert MRI tech would probably have a good handle on 95% of this book, but for anyone not at that level, it is a great reference and learning resource. Review: Love this book! - First let me give you a little background. I am an mri tech with about 1 years experience in the field. As many mri techs have learned that are new to the field, when you first get out there on your own, its kinda scary. Unlike most xray techs who have a few other techs around in the department when you have questions, most mri techs are by themselves. Anyways, this book was my best friend the first few months of my new job. I happen to work on a ge machine, which is what this book is based off of. Thats not to say if you work on a siemens or toshiba that this wouldnt help, it still shows how to set up the slices, how to angle and gives you other technical parameters, just if youre working on a ge, that would be ideal for this book. I love how it shows you the actual slices and where they should be placed, what the actual scan should look like and different views of different planes. Also I love that it gives you a little anatomy diagram next to each part that youre potentially scanning. Great book for new techs, I highly recommend it!


| Best Sellers Rank | #71,377 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #15 in Radiological & Ultrasound Technology #36 in Radiologic & Ultrasound Technology (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (312) |
| Dimensions | 6.1 x 0.8 x 8.2 inches |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 0323068189 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0323068185 |
| Item Weight | 7.6 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 416 pages |
| Publication date | January 13, 2011 |
| Publisher | Mosby |
E**F
Great MRI reference
This is a great reference book that is so far unique in the collection of MRI books out there as a spiral-bound have-next-to-the-scanner book. The next nearest book out there is Handbook of MRI Technique , though this book is much more detailed in both sequences and specific anatomy areas. This book lists out the common pulse sequences for both 1.5T and 3T, and also displays basic scan plane prescriptions. There are also line drawings of the anatomy of interest, similar to the drawings found in Sectional Anatomy for Imaging Professionals . There is also valuable information found at the beginning of each chapter which describes some of the rationale for some of the PSD selection, coils, contrast, artifacts, etc... The charts in the book list actual parameters and imaging options for each sequence, with an additional blank chart in each section meant for reader to write in their own site's standard sequences. With customized saved protocols in most scanning software, I question how useful the blank tables are, other than for general sequence listings. In future editions of this book, I would like to see a column for "Frequency direction" with it filled in as A/P, R/L, S/I. The listed "SPF swap phase & freq" can still be ambiguous and sometimes coil dependent. Other improvements I would make would be graphical views of sat band positions, listing of an estimated scan time per sequence, and also a brief discussion on the use of options like ZIP2, ZIP512, sequential, etc... Also, a flag for scans which are meant typically for a breath-hold would be nice. Overall, this book is great for anyone learning MRI as a tech, or for someone coming from a research/physicist background and needs to learn the anatomy-specific scan protocols. An experienced expert MRI tech would probably have a good handle on 95% of this book, but for anyone not at that level, it is a great reference and learning resource.
S**O
Love this book!
First let me give you a little background. I am an mri tech with about 1 years experience in the field. As many mri techs have learned that are new to the field, when you first get out there on your own, its kinda scary. Unlike most xray techs who have a few other techs around in the department when you have questions, most mri techs are by themselves. Anyways, this book was my best friend the first few months of my new job. I happen to work on a ge machine, which is what this book is based off of. Thats not to say if you work on a siemens or toshiba that this wouldnt help, it still shows how to set up the slices, how to angle and gives you other technical parameters, just if youre working on a ge, that would be ideal for this book. I love how it shows you the actual slices and where they should be placed, what the actual scan should look like and different views of different planes. Also I love that it gives you a little anatomy diagram next to each part that youre potentially scanning. Great book for new techs, I highly recommend it!
C**R
MRI book
Im super excited to have this book in hands ❤️❤️it very practical and well worded and it will help me a lot 🥰
S**N
Expensive but worth it
Good quality!
I**E
MRI Student
Decent size, shows what the scans are meant to look like, gives some information on the scans, has a page of what the parameters should be depending on if you’re on a 1.5 T or 3T. It also gives a blank page to write in your hospital protocols which I thought was really nice! Also arrived in great shape.
B**S
Worth the money
As a x-ray tech training in MRI, this book has helped me immensely. If you're ever unsure of yourself during an exam, this book gives you pictures that include aquisitions of each plane, and even parameters for 1.5 and 3 T scanners. Great to have
N**Y
Recommend
Great book. Goes in to detail about certain things with basic setups. It doesn’t get you extra things like special things that rads sometimes want, for instance the different types knee acl protocols. Other than that this book is very helpful.
R**A
Amazing tool!
I love it! I am cross-training into MRI and this handbook will help me understand better how to scan for each exam! Thank you!!!
C**E
Excellent. It had all the information I needed
N**K
Great book for students training in MRI. It not also gives the parameter but also gives detail anatomy of what to cover. Also, it gives blank pages for each anatomical site to write notes.
R**I
Ce n est pas un livre Ceux sont des pages placées en désordre.
M**I
Very good book , specially for those who are new to cross sectional imaging.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago