• DocumentCode
    11000
  • Title

    Motion Compensation for Ultrasound Thermal Imaging Using Motion-Mapped Reference Model: An in vivo Mouse Study

  • Author

    Joonho Seo ; Sun Kwon Kim ; Young-sun Kim ; Kiwan Choi ; Dong Geon Kong ; Won-Chul Bang

  • Author_Institution
    Samsung Adv. Inst. of Technol., Samsung Electron., Seoul, South Korea
  • Volume
    61
  • Issue
    11
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Nov. 2014
  • Firstpage
    2669
  • Lastpage
    2678
  • Abstract
    Ultrasound (US)-based thermal imaging is very sensitive to tissue motion, which is a major obstacle to apply US temperature monitoring to noninvasive thermal therapies of in vivo subjects. In this study, we aim to develop a motion compensation method for stable US thermal imaging in in vivo subjects. Based on the assumption that the major tissue motion is approximately periodic caused by respiration, we propose a motion compensation method for change in backscattered energy (CBE) with multiple reference frames. Among the reference frames, the most similar reference to the current frame is selected to subtract the respiratory-induced motions. Since exhaustive reference searching in all stored reference frames can impede real-time thermal imaging, we improve the reference searching by using a motion-mapped reference model. We tested our method in six tumor-bearing mice with high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) sonication in the tumor volume until the temperature had increased by 7°C. The proposed motion compensation was evaluated by root-meansquare-error (RMSE) analysis between the estimated temperature by CBE and the measured temperature by thermocouple. As a result, the mean±SD RMSE in the heating range was 1.1 ± 0.1°C with the proposed method, while the corresponding result without motion compensation was 4.3 ± 2.6°C. In addition, with the idea of motion-mapped reference frame, total processing time to produce a frame of thermal image was reduced in comparison with the exhaustive reference searching, which enabled the motioncompensated thermal imaging in 15 frames per second with 150 reference frames under 50% HIFU duty ratio.
  • Keywords
    biological tissues; biomedical ultrasonics; infrared imaging; medical image processing; motion compensation; patient monitoring; pneumodynamics; thermocouples; tumours; CBE; HIFU sonication; RMSE analysis; US temperature monitoring; change-in-backscattered energy; exhaustive reference searching; heating; high-intensity focused ultrasound sonication; in vivo mouse subjects; motion compensation method; motion-mapped reference frame; motion-mapped reference model; multiple reference frames; noninvasive thermal therapy; real-time thermal imaging; respiratory-induced motions; root-mean-square-error analysis; thermocouple; tissue motion; tumor volume; tumor-bearing mice; ultrasound-based thermal imaging; Heating; Imaging; In vivo; Mice; Motion compensation; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; In vivo mouse experiment; motion compensation; ultrasound based thermal imaging;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBME.2014.2325070
  • Filename
    6818364