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Maxwell‐compensated design of asymmetric gradient waveforms for tensor‐valued diffusion encoding
Author(s) -
Szczepankiewicz Filip,
Westin CarlFredrik,
Nilsson Markus
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.27828
Subject(s) - waveform , signal (programming language) , diffusion mri , scalar (mathematics) , physics , tensor (intrinsic definition) , asymmetry , nuclear magnetic resonance , mathematics , optics , computational physics , computer science , voltage , geometry , quantum mechanics , medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , radiology , programming language
Purpose Diffusion encoding with asymmetric gradient waveforms is appealing because the asymmetry provides superior efficiency. However, concomitant gradients may cause a residual gradient moment at the end of the waveform, which can cause significant signal error and image artifacts. The purpose of this study was to develop an asymmetric waveform designs for tensor‐valued diffusion encoding that is not sensitive to concomitant gradients. Methods The “Maxwell index” was proposed as a scalar invariant to capture the effect of concomitant gradients. Optimization of “Maxwell‐compensated” waveforms was performed in which this index was constrained. Resulting waveforms were compared to waveforms from literature, in terms of the measured and predicted impact of concomitant gradients, by numerical analysis as well as experiments in a phantom and in a healthy human brain. Results Maxwell‐compensated waveforms with Maxwell indices below 100 (mT/m) 2 ms showed negligible signal bias in both numerical analysis and experiments. By contrast, several waveforms from literature showed gross signal bias under the same conditions, leading to a signal bias that was large enough to markedly affect parameter maps. Experimental results were accurately predicted by theory. Conclusion Constraining the Maxwell index in the optimization of asymmetric gradient waveforms yields efficient diffusion encoding that negates the effects of concomitant fields while enabling arbitrary shapes of the b‐tensor. This waveform design is especially useful in combination with strong gradients, long encoding times, thick slices, simultaneous multi‐slice acquisition, and large FOVs.

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