A whole body MRI is low resolution and thick slices, they are crap.
Instead you could get thin slices at high resolution of a body site that has issues or is suspected to have them. Do that instead.
Whole body MR is 5-8mm thick slices at low in-plane resolution. A whole body scan has about 512 pixels over a 50-60cm field of view. Usually it’s even less pixels than this.
Something like a knee, or brain is 2-3mm slices, and high in-plane resolution. A knee is 512 or even 720 pixels over 14cm. It’s vastly better. The difference is stark.
A liver scan or other abdominal organ is lower resolution than a joint or brain, but unlike whole body MR is scanned in multiple planes with multiple image weighting (t1 in/out/fat sat, diffusion, t2, t2fs, gadolinium contrast). A liver scan has thin slices.
Whole body scans generally do two coronal images (stir and t1) then call it quits.
Yes the machines should definitely get better, but I recommend you do get it if the cost it truly zero. Based on the data in the article it is still worth it despite the low resolution!
Sorry, I edited my above comment to remove references to myself.
For clarity, I’m an MR tech and I can get scans of myself if I want to.
I generally don’t scan myself as it gets messy fast. If I had concerns and for some reason couldn’t get a proper imaging referral, I’d get a scan with small, good coils with high element counts (not body coils like whole body imaging uses) and scan individuals body regions.
Instead you could get thin slices at high resolution of a body site that has issues or is suspected to have them. Do that instead.
Whole body MR is 5-8mm thick slices at low in-plane resolution. A whole body scan has about 512 pixels over a 50-60cm field of view. Usually it’s even less pixels than this.
Something like a knee, or brain is 2-3mm slices, and high in-plane resolution. A knee is 512 or even 720 pixels over 14cm. It’s vastly better. The difference is stark.
A liver scan or other abdominal organ is lower resolution than a joint or brain, but unlike whole body MR is scanned in multiple planes with multiple image weighting (t1 in/out/fat sat, diffusion, t2, t2fs, gadolinium contrast). A liver scan has thin slices.
Whole body scans generally do two coronal images (stir and t1) then call it quits.