Real-Time MRI as a Solution to Motion and Moving Children

Event Details
Date: 20.11.2025, 16:00 o'clock - 18:00 o'clock 
Location: N 2045, Universitätsstraße 6a, 86159 Augsburg
Organizer(s): Institut für Informatik
Topics: Studium, Wissenschaftliche Weiterbildung, Informatik, Gesundheit und Medizin
Series of events: Medical Information Sciences
Event Type: Vortragsreihe
Speaker(s): PD Dr. Daniel Gräfe
BIOINF ASFDASDF DSFASF ASDF ASDF © University of Augsburg

In diesem Semester wird die im WiSe 2022/23 erfolgreich gestartete Vortragsreihe Medical Information Sciences fortgesetzt. Renommierte Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftler unterschiedlicher Fachdisziplinen und Forschungsstandorte geben jeden Donnerstag ab 16:00 Uhr Einblicke in aktuelle Fragestellungen und Anwendungsgebiete des breiten Forschungsfeldes Medical Information Sciences.


Real-time magnetic resonance imaging (rt-MRI) represents a major advancement in pediatric radiology, enabling ultrafast image acquisition at up to 50 frames per second — comparable to ultrasound — while maintaining the high spatial and tissue contrast characteristic of MRI. This innovative technique effectively eliminates motion artifacts caused by physiological or voluntary movement, allowing diagnostic-quality imaging in awake, unsedated infants and young children. In clinical practice, rt-MRI has already demonstrated substantial benefits, reducing the need for anesthesia or sedation in children under six years of age by up to 40%. Applications now span from rapid brain imaging to dynamic visualization of the beating heart, breathing lungs, swallowing mechanisms, and joint motion. The technique opens new diagnostic possibilities, including real-time assessment of thoracic wall malformations and cerebrospinal fluid dynamics, while offering parents and clinicians a faster, safer, and radiation-free imaging alternative. As rt-MRI continues to integrate into pediatric workflows, it is poised to transform routine imaging protocols and expand the horizons of functional and dynamic assessment in children.

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