Design of a double breast gradient coil with controlled anterior posterior gradient variation for diffusion weighted imaging
Abstract
Introduction High performance gradients poses a promise for breast diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) but are restricted by physiological limits in whole body scanners. While local nonlinear coils offer higher amplitudes, they often suffer from severe gradient reduction near the chest wall. Methods We introduced an optimization framework incorporating a constraint to control anterior posterior gradient variation. A width based figure of merit was defined to evaluate performance regarding coil efficiency and minimum wire width. A prototype was constructed to validate the design methodology. Results The optimized coil achieved a 2.35 fold efficiency increase over standard linear coils. Compared to previous nonlinear designs, the new constraint reduced spatial variation by 35.7% and improved minimum efficiency near the chest wall by 2.6 fold. Experimental field maps matched simulations with errors under 8%. Discussion The proposed method effectively mitigates the trade-off between gradient strength and spatial uniformity along anterior posterior direction. By enhancing performance in the posterior breast region, the design addresses a critical limitation of previous local coils. Conclusion This framework enables the development of high performance, robust local gradient coils, facilitating the clinical implementation of advanced DWI protocols for breast cancer screening.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.