The largest database of trusted experimental protocols

Intera 3t scanner

Manufactured by Philips

The Intera 3T scanner is a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system manufactured by Philips. It operates at a magnetic field strength of 3 Tesla, which enables high-resolution imaging of the human body. The Intera 3T scanner is designed for clinical diagnostic applications, providing detailed anatomical information to healthcare professionals.

Automatically generated - may contain errors

Lab products found in correlation

9 protocols using intera 3t scanner

1

Preoperative Assessment of Cognitive Function

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
Preoperatively, all patients were assessed for handedness, neurological examination, and a neuropsychological evaluation of cognitive abilities including upper limb apraxia. The scores obtained by patients considered for the study fell within the normal range. Preoperative MRI was performed using a Philips Intera 3 T scanner (Best) (see Bello et al. 2014 (link)).
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
2

MRI Acquisition Protocol for Brain Imaging

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
Phantom and in vivo data were acquired on a Philips Intera 3T scanner, using the body coil for transmit and a 32-channel phased-array head coil for receive. The bandwidth of the slice-selective excitation and refocusing pulses were 2.2 kHz and 1.3 kHz, respectively. The duration and bandwidth (full-width half-maximum width of each inversion lobe) of both the sinc-Gaussian and cosine-sinc-Gaussian editing pulses were 20 ms and 62 Hz, respectively.
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
3

Multimodal brain imaging protocol

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
T1-weighted magnetization prepared rapid acquisition gradient echo sequence and DTI scans were acquired using Philips Intera 3T scanner. Acquisition parameters for T1-weighted MRI scans were as follows: TR/TE = 9.6/4.6 ms, number of phase encoding steps = 208, echo train length = 208 ms, reconstruction diameter = 240 cm, acquisition matrix = 208 × 208, and flip angle = 8°. Single-shot echo-planar diffusion images comprised 15 diffusion-weighted volumes with gradient encoding applied in 15 noncollinear directions (b = 1000 s/mm2) and 1 nondiffusion-weighted reference image (b0 = 0 s/mm2 with TR/TE = 11,894.4/51 ms, number of phase encoding steps = 110, reconstruction diameter = 224 cm, imaging matrix = 128 × 128, field of view = 224 × 224, in-plane resolution = 1.75 × 1.75 mm2, slice thickness = 2 mm, acquisition matrix = 112 × 110, sense factor = 2, flip angle = 90°, and number of averages = 2).
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
4

Preoperative MRI for Lesion Characterization

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
All patients underwent MRI 1 day before surgery and at 1-month follow-up. Preoperative MRI was performed on a Philips Intera 3 T scanner (Koninklijke Philips N.V.), and acquired for lesion morphological characterization and volumetric assessment. Fifteen patients underwent a high angular resolution diffusion imaging-optimized diffusion imaging sequence using an eight-channel head coil. A spin echo, single shot echo-planar imaging sequence was performed with 73 directions collected using a b-value of 2000 s/mm3, and seven interleaved non-diffusion weighted (b0) volumes (TE: 96 ms, TR: 10.4 ms). The acquisition had a matrix size of 128 × 128 with an isotropic voxel size of 2 mm3.
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
5

Quantitative MRI Assessment of Lesions

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
As part of the clinical routine, pre- and postoperative MRI was performed on a Philips Intera 3 T scanner and acquired for lesion morphological characterization and volumetric assessment.28 (link) A post-contrast gadolinium T1-MPRAGE sequence was performed using the following parameters echo time: 2.75 ms, repetition time: 1600 ms, flip angle 9°, inversion time 900 ms; 176 slices; isotropic voxel size of 1 mm.
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
6

Multimodal MRI Acquisition Protocol

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
The structural and diffusion images were acquired on Philips Intera 3T scanner using Magnetization Prepared Rapid Acquisition Gradient Echo (MPRAGE) sequence for T1-weighted structural MRI scans and single-shot echo-planar imaging (EPI) for DTI scans respectively. The T1-weighted MRI scans were acquired using the given parameters: repetitive time (TR) = 9.6 ms, echo time (TE) = 4.6 ms, flip angle = 8°, acquisition matrix = 208 x 208, reconstruction diameter = 240 cm, echo train length = 208 ms, and number of phase encoding steps = 208. The diffusion images were acquired in 15 diffusion weighted volumes with gradient encoding applied in 15 non-collinear directions (b = 1000 s/mm2) including one non-diffusion weighted reference image (nodif, b0 = 0 s/mm2). The DTI acquisition parameters are as follows: TR = 11894.4 ms, TE = 51 ms, flip angle = 90°, reconstruction diameter = 224 cm, imaging matrix = 128 x 128, field of view = 224 x 224, number of PE steps is 110, slice thickness for the image acquisition = 2 mm, acquisition matrix = 112 x 110, pixel resolution = 1.75 x 1.75 mm2 (link), sense factor is set at value of 2 and the number of averages is equal to 2. MR Image acquisition parameters as given by IXI site http://brain-development.org/scanner-philips-medical-systems-intera-3t/
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
7

Neuroimaging Dataset of Healthy Young Adults

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
AOMIC is an open‐access neuroimaging dataset including structural and functional MRI scans (Snoek et al., 2021 (link)). Here, we analyze the “ID1000” subset of the data which comprised healthy young adults aged 19–26 (N = 928) scanned between 2010 and 2012 at University of Amsterdam. Participants were recruited from the general Dutch population, with efforts to recruit from a variety of educational backgrounds. Each participant was scanned three times in a single session using the same imaging parameters. Specifically, MR images were acquired with a Phillips Intera 3 T scanner. T1‐weighted MR images were acquired using a sagittal 3D‐MPRAGE sequence. In addition to MRI scanning, participants also completed many well‐validated self‐report scales and behavioral assessments, including measures of cognitive ability, personality, and motivation. Additional details of the data collection are summarized in our Supplemental Materials (S1).
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
8

High-Resolution T1-Weighted MRI Protocol

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
For the training set of high-resolution T1-weighted magnetic resonance images, multiple scanners were used, including different vendors, field strengths, and acquisition protocols (see Supplementary Table). For the test set, T1 images were acquired using a Philips 3T Intera scanner (Philips Medical Systems, Best, the Netherlands) with the following parameters: matrix size * 208 × 208, slice thickness * 1.2mm, 0.94 x 0.94mm in-plane resolution, 150 slices, repetition time * 9.6 milliseconds, echo time * 4.5 milliseconds, flip angle * 8°.
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
9

3T MRI Brain Imaging Protocol

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
MR images were acquired with a Phillips 3 T Intera scanner at the University of Amsterdam. T1-weighted MR images were acquired using a sagittal 3D-MPRAGE sequence (TR/TE = 8.1 ms/3.7 ms, 1mm3 voxel, matrix size = 64 × 64). Additional details about the scanning parameters are described by Snoek and colleagues (2021). MRI Images were visually inspected to determine if a participant’s scans should be included in subsequent processing steps (e.g., FreeSurfer).
+ Open protocol
+ Expand

About PubCompare

Our mission is to provide scientists with the largest repository of trustworthy protocols and intelligent analytical tools, thereby offering them extensive information to design robust protocols aimed at minimizing the risk of failures.

We believe that the most crucial aspect is to grant scientists access to a wide range of reliable sources and new useful tools that surpass human capabilities.

However, we trust in allowing scientists to determine how to construct their own protocols based on this information, as they are the experts in their field.

Ready to get started?

Sign up for free.
Registration takes 20 seconds.
Available from any computer
No download required

Sign up now

Revolutionizing how scientists
search and build protocols!