Title :
Clutter filter design for ultrasound color flow imaging
Author :
Bjaerum, S. ; Torp, Hans ; Kristoffersen, Kjell
Author_Institution :
GE Vingmed Ultrasound, Horten, Norway
Abstract :
For ultrasound color flow images with high quality, it is important to suppress the clutter signals originating from stationary and slowly moving tissue sufficiently. Without sufficient clutter rejection, low velocity blood flow cannot be measured, and estimates of higher velocities will have a large bias. The small number of samples available (8 to 16) makes clutter filtering in color flow imaging a challenging problem. In this paper, we review and analyze three classes of filters: finite impulse response (FIR), infinite impulse response (IIR), and regression filters. The quality of the filters was assessed based on the frequency response, as well as on the bias and variance of a mean blood velocity estimator using an autocorrelation technique. For FIR filters, the frequency response was improved by allowing a non-linear phase response. By estimating the mean blood flow velocity from two vectors filtered in the forward and backward direction, respectively, the standard deviation was significantly lower with a minimum phase filter than with a linear phase filter. For IIR filters applied to short signals, the transient part of the output signal is important. We analyzed zero, step, and projection initialization, and found that projection initialization gave the best filters. For regression filters, polynomial basis functions provide effective clutter suppression. The best filters from each of the three classes gave comparable bias and variance of the mean blood velocity estimates. However, polynomial regression filters and projection-initialized IIR filters had a slightly better frequency response than could be obtained with FIR filters.
Keywords :
FIR filters; IIR filters; acoustic signal processing; biomedical ultrasonics; blood flow measurement; clutter; flow visualisation; frequency response; medical image processing; transient response; Doppler blood flow measurements; autocorrelation technique; clutter filter design; computational complexity; effective clutter suppression; finite impulse response filters; frequency response; infinite impulse response filters; low velocity blood flow; mean blood velocity estimator; nonlinear phase response; polynomial basis functions; projection initialization; regression filters; state space formulation; stationary slowly moving tissue; transient response; ultrasound color flow imaging; Blood flow; Finite impulse response filter; Fluid flow measurement; Frequency response; IIR filters; Nonlinear filters; Polynomials; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement; Velocity measurement; Blood Flow Velocity; Computer Simulation; Equipment Design; Mathematics; Ultrasonography, Doppler, Color;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on