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Your protons are also oriented by the Earth's magnetic field, and the magnets in your phone speakers. Larmor precession (the effect) occurs in low fields just as in high fields. The energy state differences from Earth's field are generally too small to be useful for MRI with enough quality in a reasonable time, but low-field MRI is a research area.

I actually felt a strong sensation when I had a high resolution brain MRI for research, and I rather enjoyed it. It switched on and off a few times during the scan, and it felt a bit like having a back massage, or significant mechanical vibrations in my back, or that feeling like gentle electric currents during some therapies, except for switching on and off abruptly.

I asked about this after the scan because I had been told you don't feel anything. Surely it wasn't just my imagination, from the noises? Was it from machine vibrations? I didn't have any metal in my body except amalgam fillings, and they said those wouldn't affect it. And, if I could feel something, perhaps it wasn't as harmless as they made out.

They explained after, some people feel a stimulation of their peripheral nervous system when the RF is on, from the tens of kW of microwave energy beamed through the body. For a few people this sensation is too much, even painful, and they have to stop which is one reason for the patient having the mechanical alert button. But most people don't feel anything at all from the MRI, just psychological feelings associated with the strange noises and confinemnt.

They said it's a peripheral nerve stimulation sensation, a kind of phantom feeling, rather than a physical effect on the body being sensed by the nerves. Don't ask me why I felt it in my back given it was a head and neck scan.

I enjoyed how it felt when I didn't know what it was, as it felt like it might loosen up my back a bit. I was a bit disappointed to not feel anything the next time I had a head MRI, for a medical reason (thankfully nothing found). The research scan had twice the field strength of the medical scan, and presumably different RF settings. Perhaps that made the difference.



>low-field MRI is a research area.

Not just a research area! Recently on the DXMP mailing list someone was asking about QA procedures for their 0.064 tesla scanner. You can buy permanent magnets that strong without much trouble. I was very surprised since I wasn't aware they were in production — even searching Web results for "low-field MRI" in due diligence for this comment, I still only find papers and projections. Nonetheless, the Hyperfine Swoop exists, and you can buy it today:

https://hyperfine.io/


any idea how much could "Hyperfine Swoop System" cost? since pricing is not public


250K USD




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