Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Is it difficult to do a single hip MRI?

Is it difficult to do a single hip MRI?

No, it's hard to shoot.

According to 39 Health Network, a single hip MRI is not difficult. When shooting a single hip MRI, it is necessary to select the appropriate coil and locate it. Generally, abdominal coil is selected and wound around the affected hip joint. Try to place the affected hip joint in the center of the scanning table. Then, before scanning the glenoid lip, we need to scan the coronal T 1WI sequence of double hip joints, and the field of view (FOV) should be as large as possible, and the scanning range should include the pelvis and surrounding soft tissues. We should use axial T2WI compression sequence scanning to exclude other causes of hip pain as much as possible. Oblique axial position: scan parallel to the long axis of femoral neck, and scan the line perpendicular to the anterior and posterior edge of acetabulum on the basis of completion. The scanning parameters of the above two postures: TR3500msTE=30ms, FOV: 15 cm × 15 cm, matrix: 256×256, scanning layer thickness 2 ~ 3 cm, and the scanning range above 0.3cm should include the whole labia.