Hi Waterdown,After I had shown areas of vasoconstriction and dilation during a brain MRI/MRA (MRAngiography) in my local hospital, I was sent to a centre of neuroscience for a repeat 3T MRI/MRA.They are supposed to increase the signal intensity but can give rise to greater amounts of artifacts. An artifact on imaging is defined as the following" An image artifact is any feature which appears in an image which is not present in the original imaged object. An image artifact is sometime the result of improper operation of the imager, and other times a consequence of natural processes or properties of the human body. It is important to be familiar with the appearance of artifacts because artifacts can obscure, and be mistaken for, pathology. Therefore, image artifacts can result in false negatives and false positives" Bit long winded explanation so here's a simple example, maybe you remember in school looking at cells down a plain old light microscope, and suddenly you see a big spider crawling along the slide and soon you realise it is not a spider but your eyelashes, the eyelashes are causing an artifact.So these machines tend to be in more specialised units as they are more complicated to run and interpret. I dont know if they are better or not in clinical settings, I was informed for angiography of brain vessels it was the best way to go, so I just did as I was told. They say they can reduce scanning time because the 3T increases in signal intensity so need less repeats of measurements, but I didn't find my time in scanner any shorter even though they started by repeating my previous scan.One thing I certainly did find is that compared to the 1.5, I was a lot more disorientated when I left the scanner. I felt quite out of it and dizzy for a while. It took a while to lift and I developed a headache from hell for a few hours. I was told that was quite common with the higher magn field etcHope this helps and good luck with your scan. Hxpps out of interest my MRi/MRA scan in the 3T was clear despite what was seen on the 1.5 scan. They were quite confused and put it down to 1 of 3 things. Either a prolonged migraine aura( I only get visual never normally get headaches), or a resolved vasculitis. or that my vessels may just be reactionary due to me having near fatal bacterial meningitis as a baby which put me in coma. True one pupil reacts slower than the other. I think there was a 4th option, that being THEY HAD NO IDEA, fancy 3T scan in all.