1. Field of the Invention
The invention concerns a method for correcting field drifts with a higher order than the zeroth order that occur due to the operation of gradient coils in a magnetic resonance scanner while recording magnetic resonance data with the magnetic resonance scanner. The invention also concerns a magnetic resonance apparatus for implementing such a method.
2. Description of the Prior Art
It is known that the use of gradient coils, particularly when utilized in magnetic resonance sequences such as diffusion-weighted imaging, involves a significant increase in the temperature of the gradient coils. This results in field drifts for various reasons. Drifts of the zeroth order of the basic magnetic field, which manifest themselves in shifts of the Larmor frequency, are of first concern. Field drifts of a higher order, in particular linear terms or terms higher than the first order, may also occur. Techniques have been proposed to correct negative effects that occur due to these field drifts, by directly compensating for field drifts, or by post-processing recorded magnetic resonance data.
EP 1 482 320 A2 discloses temperature-stable shimming of a magnetic resonance system using both passive shims and active, resistive shims (shim coils). Based on the fact that the temperature-dependent magnetization of the passive shim elements, and thus the shim effect of the passive shim elements, change, it is proposed in EP 1 482 320 A2 to measure the temperature of the passive shim elements and to adjust the control currents of the active, resistive shim coils in order to maintain the homogeneity of the magnetic field. It has been shown, however, that this method is only able to achieve inadequate improvements, since only an extremely low correlation exists between the field drifts and the temperature of the passive shim elements, for instance shim irons. It is thus generally not possible to make meaningfully valid associations.
DE 10 2012 217 594 A1 discloses a magnetic resonance tomography system having a device for compensating for temperature fluctuations. The basis of this device is to use a temperature sensor that is simple to add, which is provided on a gradient coil connector or on the patient receptacle (the OVC bore), wherein this sensor allows temperature fluctuations in the gradient coil connector or in the OVC bore, which receives the BO coil arrangement to be correlated particularly well with the frequency drifts of the zeroth order (displacements of the Larmor frequency). It is thus proposed in DE 10 2012 217 594 A1 to respond to these shifts of the basic magnetic field (B0 magnetic field) of the zeroth order with an adjustment of the Larmor frequency in the actuation of the gradient coils and/or the radio-frequency coils. In addition and independently of this, the method described by EP 1 482 320 A2 can also be used.
The procedure described by DE 10 2012 217 594 A1 is problematic because although a good correction of field drifts of the zeroth order is enabled, effects of a higher order do not correlate with the temperatures at the measurement locations that are employed, there and consequently cannot be corrected or compensated.
US 2012/0082357 A1 discloses a system and a method for modeling magnetic field drifts induced by the operation of gradient coils. It is proposed therein to determine the suspected field drifts solely on the basis of a theoretical calculation and to use that calculation to correct the recorded magnetic resonance data. Problems with this approach are not only that no measurements take place, but also that not all effects that occur are taken into account. For instance, the effect of cooling systems of the magnetic resonance device is not taken into account in US 2012/0082357 A1, furthermore aside from a pressure variation in the cryostat for the B0 field coils, the gradient operation only results in a “warm bore contribution” which is responsible for the effects of the zeroth order addressed in DE 10 2012 217 594 A1, and in influences on the passive shim elements, as addressed in EP 1 482 320 A2, without a meaningful correlation resulting, which could form the basis of an effective, functioning, measurement-based correction method. Also critical to such a purely calculation-based method is that no precise knowledge of the past gradient activity, the initial state of the system, and the thermal time constants, is available, until the system asymptotically reaches a thermal equilibrium.
The approaches known in the prior art are thus also not able to allow for a complete correction of field drifts of a higher order than the zeroth order, so that in this respect there is a need for improvement. In particular, the hitherto unheeded effects of the physical expansion of the gradient coil, which results in a changed position of the gradient windings and thus in changed sensitivities, should also be addressed by thermally specific displacements of passive shim elements, since an expanding gradient coil physically displaces the passive shim elements from their original position, and thus also involves an additional change in the magnetization change on account of the temperature in the shim iron.
An object of the invention thus is to provide a realtime-capable and effective correction method, which is simple to realize, for field drifts of a higher order caused by the operation of gradient coils.
This object is achieved in accordance with the invention by a method for correcting field drifts of a higher order than the zeroth order, which occur due to the operation of gradient coils in a magnetic resonance scanner, while recording magnetic resonance data with the magnetic resonance scanner, wherein at least one temperature sensor is used to determine the gradient coil temperature directly on the gradient coils, and as a function of the gradient coil temperature at least one field variable describing at least one part of the field drifts is determined, and the field drifts are corrected by the actuation of the gradient coils and/or shim coils being modified in order to compensate for field drifts described by the field variable, and/or the acquired magnetic resonance data are corrected by a post-processing procedure (algorithm) that corrects the effects of the field drifts described by the field variable.
The aforementioned modification of the actuation of the gradient coils and/or the shim coils means a modification of the operation thereof from the operation of the gradient coils and/or shim coils that occurs during the course of acquiring magnetic resonance data with the scanner prior to the aforementioned detection of the gradient coil temperature directly on the gradient coils and the determination of the field drifts as a function thereof.
The present invention is based in part on the insight that temperature measured values of the gradient coils themselves, in particular temperature measured by sensors installed in the gradient coil arrangement, correlate extremely well with measured field drifts of a higher order than the zeroth order. It has, moreover, been shown that the effects that result in field drifts of a higher order can be observed independently of the effects that result in field drifts of a zeroth order. Both effects are on different time scales, and it has been shown that the field drifts of a zeroth order, as are discussed for instance in DE 10 2012 217 594 A1, are instead associated with the temperatures on the OVC bore and/or the gradient connector. If terms of the spherical harmonics are observed for instance, mathematical associations can be derived from measured values for the gradient coil temperature and the respective field drift, which are characterized by an extremely high coefficient of determination (R2).
Within the scope of the present invention, it is preferable to determine the field variables, in particular for field drifts described by a term of a spherical harmonics, as a function of an experimentally determined association between the gradient coil temperature and the field variable. This derivability of simple mathematical associations, which indicates the high correlation between the gradient coil temperature and the corresponding field drifts, predestines the present invention for a realtime correction by modified actuation of the gradient coils and/or the shim coils. In particular, series of measurements were recorded as a basis of the invention that indicate that a hysteresis could barely be seen during warm-up and cool-down processes, so that, due to the associations found, currently measured gradient coil temperatures always directly allow for a statement relating to the present field drifts of the order or of the term to which the association applies. For linear drift fields (B11) and drift fields of the second order (precisely A20 and A21), coefficients of determination of greater than 0.988 could be achieved for simple fits with polynomials of the second order. The terms which are actually relevant to the development may depend on the precise embodiment of the magnetic resonance device, so that general combinations of the terms A10, A20, B11, A21, A22, B21 and/or B22 may also be relevant.
It should be noted that the required corrections in the actuation of the gradient coils and/or shim coils naturally inevitably result in a basically known manner only when the field variables are known. If the drift fields to be corrected are described by the field variables and/or field variables even describe a changed sensitivity of the gradient coils, actuation parameters result therefrom for the gradient coils (for the correction of field drifts of the first order) and for the shim coils, which are also typically assigned to specific terms of the spherical harmonics. The precise realtime correction measures therefore do not need to be presented in detail herein, even if an approach is selected in which magnetic resonance data are corrected in a post-processing step. Procedures are known that, on the basis of knowledge about the magnetic resonance fields present during the recording process, allow for a correction of the recorded magnetic resonance data. As mentioned, realtime corrections are preferably to be performed within the scope of the present invention.
As examinations have shown, main effects are those that contribute to the field drifts of a higher order, in particular of the first order and second order, and the previously unconsidered effects of the spatial displacement of windings of the gradient coils and/or of passive shim elements, wherein the former result in a changed sensitivity of the gradient coil. In other words, preferably at least one of the aforementioned field variables relates to field drifts that occur as a result of a change in the sensitivity of the gradient coils, and/or as a result of displacements of passive shim elements of the magnetic resonance scanner that occur due to expansion processes.
Overall, the inventive method allows previously still uncorrectable effects of the operation of the gradient coils to be corrected accurately and simply, in particular in real-time, by virtue of the high correlation of field drifts of a higher order with the gradient coil temperature. An improved quality of the recorded magnetic resonance data is enabled as a result. Only one calibration may be needed in accordance with the invention, which can take place within the scope of a measurement, wherein for instance, as noted, gradient coil temperatures can be measured together with field drifts, particularly in the form of drift fields. A mathematical association between the gradient coil temperatures and the field variables describing the field drifts can then be derived and used within the scope of the present invention in order, less preferably, to perform a correction in the post-processing. In a more efficient and preferred manner the correction is performed during the execution of the magnetic resonance sequence, by adjusting the actuation of the gradient coils, in particular the gradient coil amplitude, and/or the actuation of the shim coils, in particular linear static shim offsets and shim coils of a second order.
In an embodiment, multiple temperature sensors are used, and the gradient coil temperature to be used is determined as an average value of the measured values from at least some of the temperature sensors, but preferably from all temperature sensors. A more precise fluctuation-free measurement results by using multiple temperature sensors, which can be cast into carrier material (a substrate) for the conductor path of the gradient coils for instance.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the measured values of the at least one temperature sensor are also evaluated in order to monitor overheating of the gradient coils. Gradient coil arrangements are known that, aside from the gradient coils, also have temperature sensors provided directly on the gradient coils, which emit signals that can be evaluated in order to detect an overheating of the gradient coils, so as to take these coils out of operation once an overheat criterion has been fulfilled (emergency shutdown). Temperature sensors of this type can now be used for a number of purposes, namely within the scope of the known overheat protection measures, as well as within the scope of the inventive correction of field drifts of a higher order, which occur due to the operation of the gradient coils themselves.
With a real-time correction by modifying the actuation of the gradient coils and/or the shim coils, two different, precise realizations are conceivable. It is possible to use a correction installation unit having at least one hardware component, in particular an FPGA that directly evaluates the gradient coil temperature in order to modify control. An extremely quick response to current measured values of the gradient coil temperature is possible in this way, such as by correction currents or generally correction signals being generated, which are supplied to the gradient coils and/or shim coils in addition to the basic operating currents. Alternatively, it is conceivable to use at least one sequence controller, which is configured to generate and emit magnetic resonance sequences in order to record the magnetic resonance data. Then the control currents or control signals for the gradient coils or shim coils to be emitted by the sequencer within the scope of the magnetic resonance sequence in order to record the magnetic resonance data are modified in the sequencer already on the basis of the gradient coil temperature and corresponding calculations. A simpler and more compact design can thus be achieved.
The invention also concerns a magnetic resonance apparatus with a scanner that has a gradient coil arrangement with gradient coils and at least one temperature sensor, and a control computer configured to perform an inventive method. The control computer can have or be connected to, as described above, a correction installation processor and/or a correspondingly modified sequencer. All embodiments relating to the inventive method can apply analogously to the inventive magnetic resonance apparatus, so that the aforementioned advantages thus can also be achieved.
The associations which were obtained in a calibration measurement as shown by way of example in
The field variables described herein as drift fields, in other words field deviations, can finally be directly translated into a modified actuation of the gradient coils and shim coils (A21 coils, A20 coil) assigned to the corresponding terms of the spherical harmonics, particularly since the gradient coils are embodied precisely in order to generate linear overlay fields.
A computerized sequence 10 is provided in order to implement the magnetic resonance sequence to acquire magnetic resonance data.
The measured values of the temperature sensors 7 are fed in both embodiments to a temperature monitoring unit 11, which also can be configured to monitor whether an overheating of the gradient coils takes place. If this occurs, an emergency shutoff can be made, for instance.
In the exemplary embodiment according to
The gradient coil temperature to be used can be an average value of the measured values of all temperature sensors 7.
In the second exemplary embodiment according to
Although modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventor to embody within the patent warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of his contribution to the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102015205150.1 | Mar 2015 | DE | national |