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Purpose: To develop a highly efficient magnetic field gradient coil for head imaging that achieves 200 mT/m and 500 T/m/s on each axis using a standard 1 MVA gradient driver in clinical whole-body 3.0T MR magnet.
Methods: A 42-cm inner diameter head-gradient used the available 89- to 91-cm warm bore space in a whole-body 3.0T magnet by increasing the radial separation between the primary and the shield coil windings to 18.6 cm. This required the removal of the standard whole-body gradient and radiofrequency coils. To achieve a coil efficiency ~4× that of whole-body gradients, a double-layer primary coil design with asymmetric x-y axes, and symmetric z-axis was used. The use of all-hollow conductor with direct fluid cooling of the gradient coil enabled ≥50 kW of total heat dissipation.
Results: This design achieved a coil efficiency of 0.32 mT/m/A, allowing 200 mT/m and 500 T/m/s for a 620 A/1500 V driver. The gradient coil yielded substantially reduced echo spacing, and minimum repetition time and echo time. In high b = 10,000 s/mm diffusion, echo time (TE) < 50 ms was achieved (>50% reduction compared with whole-body gradients). The gradient coil passed the American College of Radiology tests for gradient linearity and distortion, and met acoustic requirements for nonsignificant risk operation.
Conclusions: Ultra-high gradient coil performance was achieved for head imaging without substantial increases in gradient driver power in a whole-body 3.0T magnet after removing the standard gradient coil. As such, any clinical whole-body 3.0T MR system could be upgraded with 3-4× improvement in gradient performance for brain imaging.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28087 | DOI Listing |
NMR Biomed
October 2025
Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, Massachusetts, USA.
∆B shim optimization performed at the beginning of an MR scan is unable to correct for ∆B field inhomogeneities caused by patient motion or hardware instability during scans. Navigator-based methods have been demonstrated previously to be effective for motion and shim correction. The purpose of this work was to accelerate volumetric navigators to allow fast acquisition of the parent navigated sequence with short real-time feedback time and high spatial resolution of the ∆B field mapping.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Magn Reson
August 2025
School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia. Electronic address:
Gradient coils play a critical role in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) systems by enabling spatial encoding through generating rapidly switching magnetic fields. However, these time-varying fields induce eddy currents in surrounding conductive structures, leading to gradient field distortions and imaging artifacts. In this study, we propose an automatic eddy current compensation method implemented on a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) platform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Phys
September 2025
Department of Biomedical Imaging and Radiological Science, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan.
Background: Intracranial aneurysms, particularly saccular types, are localized dilations of cerebral vessels prone to rupture, leading to life-threatening complications such as subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Purpose: This study aimed to characterize the localized hemodynamic environment within the aneurysm dome and evaluate how spatial interactions among key flow parameters contribute to rupture risk, using a synergistic analytical framework.
Methods: We applied the targeted evaluation of synergistic links in aneurysms (TESLA) framework to analyze 18 intracranial aneurysms from 15 patients.
NMR Biomed
October 2025
School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
The ultrahigh field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) superconducting magnets require a high homogeneous magnetic field within the diameter of spherical volume (DSV) to generate high-quality images. Spherical harmonic-based B shimming relies significantly on the fitting process, which can be computationally demanding, particularly when managing multiple shim coils. The study presents an automatic room-temperature shimming approach that iteratively adjusts shim coil currents to enhance magnetic field homogeneity, using the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the spectrum as a metric.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Med
August 2025
Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica, Torino, Italy.
Purpose: To investigate whether heating contributions produced by radiofrequency (RF) and gradient fields superpose sufficiently at the worst-case locations to justify their simultaneous consideration in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) implant safety labeling.
Theory And Methods: Six implant models were positioned in an ASTM phantom and realistically implanted in two anatomical human models, and exposed to gradient and RF fields at 64 MHz and 128 MHz. The simulations with the anatomical body models considered different axial exposure landmarks inside the RF and gradient body coils.