MRI: Difference between revisions

From Medicine GPT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(CSV import)
(CSV import)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Definitions
{{Definitions
|Term=MRI
|Term=MRI
|Short definition=nuclear factor-kappa B - {{Pronunciation}} (NOO-klee-er FAK-ter-KA-phew.
|Short definition=MRI - A procedure that uses radio waves, a powerful magnet, and a computer to create a series of detailed images of areas inside the body. A contrast agent, such as gadolinium, may be injected into a vein to help tissue and organs appear more clearly in the image. 
|Type=Cancer terms
|Type=Cancer terms
|Specialty=Oncology
|Specialty=Oncology
Line 7: Line 7:
|Source=NCI
|Source=NCI
}}
}}
MRI - {{Pronunciation}} (NOO-klee-he likes-NEH-tik REH-zuh-nunts IH-muh-jing) A procedure that uses radio waves, a strong magnet, and a computer to create a series of detailed images of areas inside the body. A contrast agent, such as gadolinium, may be injected into a vein to help tissue and organs appear more clearly in the image. Magnetic resonance imaging can be used to diagnose diseases, plan treatment, or find out how well treatment is working. It is particularly useful for imaging the brain and spinal cord, heart and blood vessels, bones, joints and other soft tissues, organs in the pelvis and abdomen, and chest. Also called magnetic resonance imaging, MRI and NMRI {{dictionary-stub}} [[Category:Dictionary of medicine]]
MRI - A procedure that uses radio waves, a powerful magnet, and a computer to create a series of detailed images of areas inside the body. A contrast agent, such as gadolinium, may be injected into a vein to help tissue and organs appear more clearly in the image. MRI can be used to diagnose diseases, plan treatment, or find out how well treatment is working. It is particularly useful for imaging the brain and spinal cord, heart and blood vessels, bones, joints and other soft tissues, organs in the pelvis and abdomen, and chest. Also called Magnetic Resonance Imaging, NMRI and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging {{dictionary-stub}} [[Category:Dictionary of medicine]]

Latest revision as of 18:05, 13 January 2023

MRI
TermMRI
Short definitionMRI - A procedure that uses radio waves, a powerful magnet, and a computer to create a series of detailed images of areas inside the body. A contrast agent, such as gadolinium, may be injected into a vein to help tissue and organs appear more clearly in the image. 
TypeCancer terms
SpecialtyOncology
LanguageEnglish
SourceNCI
Comments


MRI - A procedure that uses radio waves, a powerful magnet, and a computer to create a series of detailed images of areas inside the body. A contrast agent, such as gadolinium, may be injected into a vein to help tissue and organs appear more clearly in the image. MRI can be used to diagnose diseases, plan treatment, or find out how well treatment is working. It is particularly useful for imaging the brain and spinal cord, heart and blood vessels, bones, joints and other soft tissues, organs in the pelvis and abdomen, and chest. Also called Magnetic Resonance Imaging, NMRI and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging

External links

Esculaap.svg

This MedicineGPT article is a stub. You can help make it a full article.


Languages: - East Asian 中文, 日本, 한국어, South Asian हिन्दी, Urdu, বাংলা, తెలుగు, தமிழ், ಕನ್ನಡ,
Southeast Asian Indonesian, Vietnamese, Thai, မြန်မာဘာသာ, European español, Deutsch, français, русский, português do Brasil, Italian, polski