EnhancedRadiology provides high quality radiological exams in a number of imaging modalities. Diagnostic studies are performed in a comfortable setting by caring, well trained technicians using the latest equipment.
Enhanced Radiology Center is a big medical servising center providing MRI. MRI is a one type of scanning technique and process that is use for human life. MRI imaging technique, strong magnets and radio waves are applied for getting images of inner organs made of soft tissue, compared to X-ray imaging where you get images of hard tissue, like bones and teeth.
About MRI
In this treatment you are to assist in an MRI investigation. We have to choose one patient out of four, for conducting an MRI investigation. This patient may not have a pacemaker, implants of metal, nor suffering from claustrofobia. Hereafter you have to remove all objects made of metal from the patient, before put in the MRI apparatus. The problem after the investigation is that a computer is dropped on the floor and all images becomes disorganized. Your mission will be to sort these images into the proper folders: X-ray images to the X-ray folder, MRI-images to the MRI folder and so on.
MRI is a one type of scan, always breakthrough in medical diagnostics and research. Worldwide, more than 50 million investigations with MRI are performed each year.
MRI scan of the back arm is a noninvasive method to make elaborate pictures of the upper and lower arm, including the elbow, wrist, hands, fingers, and the environing muscles and other tissues.
MRI applies heavy magnets and radio waves. The MRI scanner bears the magnet. The magnetic field produced by an MRI is about 10 thousand times greater than the earth's.
The magnetic field forces hydrogen atoms in the body to line up in a certain way (similar to how the needle on a compass moves when you hold it near a magnet). When radio waves are sent toward the lined-up hydrogen atoms, they bounce back, and a computer records the signal. Different types of tissues send back different signals.
Single MRI images are called slices. The images can be stored on a computer or printed on film. One exam produces dozens or sometimes hundreds of images.