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Revisiting meniscal anatomical variants of the knee: a high-resolution 7-Tesla MRI study - European Radiology Objectives To examine anatomical variants of meniscal root insertions among asymptomatic individuals using high-resolution 7-T MRI. Materials and methods This prospective study, approved by the local…

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#EuropeanRadiology #Musculoskeletal #MRI #7TMRI #KneeImaging

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Congratulations, what a great success 🎉🎉 @hih-tuebingen.bsky.social #7TMRI #layer #career

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🚨 Last chance to register for the AIBN & HIRF imaging tour!
🧠 Explore UQ’s cutting-edge neuroimaging facilities this Monday, June 23.
🔗 Link in comments
🕐 Registration closes today—don’t miss out!
#OHBM2025 #BrainMapping #7TMRI

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Body Imaging at 7T: A Path Toward Clinical Translation 
by Greg Metzger, Ph.D.; et al.  (University of Minnesota Center for Magnetic Resonance Research (CMRR)), Minneapolis, MN, USA.

The evolution of ultra-high-field (UHF) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 7 Tesla is gradually unlocking opportunities for high-resolution anatomical and functional imaging of the human torso. Over nearly two decades, progress in radio-frequency (RF) hardware, transmit chain architectures, and electromagnetic field management strategies have addressed many of the challenges associated with transmit B1 (B1+) inhomogeneity and specific absorption rate (SAR) constraints. 

Key developments include the transition from single-channel to parallel transmit (pTx) systems, the development of multichannel transceiver arrays, and advanced RF shimming and pulse design techniques that balance B1+ efficiency and homogeneity. 
High-quality images obtained at 7T and 10.5T in the pelvis, abdomen, and chest demonstrate the potential for clinical translation, while ongoing innovations in real-time SAR monitoring, calibration methods, and universal solutions promise to streamline workflows. 

7T MRI is poised to transform precision medicine by merging high sensitivity with molecular insights. In this article, the authors review the interplay between technological innovation and anatomy-specific imaging at CMRR, concluding with a roadmap for clinical adoption.

Body Imaging at 7T: A Path Toward Clinical Translation by Greg Metzger, Ph.D.; et al. (University of Minnesota Center for Magnetic Resonance Research (CMRR)), Minneapolis, MN, USA. The evolution of ultra-high-field (UHF) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 7 Tesla is gradually unlocking opportunities for high-resolution anatomical and functional imaging of the human torso. Over nearly two decades, progress in radio-frequency (RF) hardware, transmit chain architectures, and electromagnetic field management strategies have addressed many of the challenges associated with transmit B1 (B1+) inhomogeneity and specific absorption rate (SAR) constraints. Key developments include the transition from single-channel to parallel transmit (pTx) systems, the development of multichannel transceiver arrays, and advanced RF shimming and pulse design techniques that balance B1+ efficiency and homogeneity. High-quality images obtained at 7T and 10.5T in the pelvis, abdomen, and chest demonstrate the potential for clinical translation, while ongoing innovations in real-time SAR monitoring, calibration methods, and universal solutions promise to streamline workflows. 7T MRI is poised to transform precision medicine by merging high sensitivity with molecular insights. In this article, the authors review the interplay between technological innovation and anatomy-specific imaging at CMRR, concluding with a roadmap for clinical adoption.

Body #MRI at 7T: A Path Toward Clinical Translation
by Greg Metzger, PhD; et al. (CMRR, University of Minnesota).

🔗www.magnetomworld.siemens-healthineers.com/clinical-corner/case-stu...

#RadSky #UHF #7TMRI #BodyMRI #MagnetomWorld #SiemensHealthineers #PrecisionMedicine #MedPhys

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Key point: We scanned 31 patients with parallel transmit and conventional 7T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), finding previously-unreported structural lesions in nine patients (29% of cases).
doi.org/10.1111/epi.... Open Access

#epilepsy #ilae #epilepsia #7TMRI #epilepsysurgery #focalepilepsy

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Cladribine Is Associated With Stable Cortical Gray Matter Lesion Burden in Multiple Sclerosis: A 7T MRI Study
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...

#neuroimaging #neurology #neuroskyence #radiology #cladribine #multiplesclerosis #7TMRI #corticallesions

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Representational Similarity Analysis Reveals Cue-independent Spatial Representations for Landmarks and Self-motion Cues in Human Retrosplenial Cortex Abstract. It is a fundamental question in the spatial navigation literature how different spatial cues are unified to form a coherent spatial map of the space. Landmarks and self-motion cues are two m...

How does the brain unify various spatial cues to form coherent spatial representations? Our latest paper shows that RSC contains cue-independent spatial representations in terms of representational similarity during spatial navigation. #7tmri #WolbersLab
doi.org/10.1162/imag...

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PhD Candidate in Clinical Systems Neuroscience and Epilepsy (275793) | NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology Job title: PhD Candidate in Clinical Systems Neuroscience and Epilepsy (275793), Employer: NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Deadline: Tuesday, March 18, 2025

🚀 We’re hiring a PhD Candidate!
Join CBS (www.ntnu.edu/inb/cbs) to work with a multidisciplinary team using #7TMRI, #sEEG, and #MachineLearning in patients with #epilepsy.
📍 Trondheim, Norway.
📆 Deadline: March 18, 2025.
🔗 More info / Apply here: www.jobbnorge.no/en/available...
👉 Spread the word!

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