
BMJ
2004;328:1387-1388 (12 June), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7453.1387
Editorial
Whole body magnetic resonance imaging - A valuable adjunct
to clinical examination
When Lauterbur and Damadian described the application of
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a clinical imaging tool
in the early 1970s the popular belief was that the technique
would become the ultimate screening tool for the whole body.1
2 However, similar to other modalities limited by cost,
acquisition times, availability, and artefact produced by
motion, it evolved as a technique to image stationary body
parts. Supported by technical developments in the past decade,
improved excitatory pulse sequences, and faster methods
of localising derived signal, and by increasing awareness
of the hazards of radiation imposed by traditional techniques,
the ability to use MRI as a rapid imaging tool for the whole
body has now been revisited.3-11 Reduced acquisition times
have been mirrored by a logical reduction in acquisition
costs, and the recent development of the moving MRI table
top has facilitated the clinical introduction of this technique
as a practical diagnostic tool.3
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