• DocumentCode
    129734
  • Title

    Phantom and in vivo evaluation of sound speed estimation methods: Preliminary results

  • Author

    Sooah Cho ; Jeeun Kang ; Jinbum Kang ; Wooyoul Lee ; Yangmo Yoo

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electron. Eng., Sogang Univ., Seoul, South Korea
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    3-6 Sept. 2014
  • Firstpage
    1678
  • Lastpage
    1681
  • Abstract
    For medical ultrasound imaging, the dynamic receive beamforming is important for improving image quality, i.e., spatial and contrast resolution. In current dynamic receive beamforming, a constant sound speed (e.g., 1540m/s) is assumed. However, the sound speed dispersed in soft tissues leads to defocusing and degradation of image quality. Various methods have been proposed to estimate the proper sound speed with received data, but these methods have not been verified their performance in clinical cases (e.g., breast tissue). In this paper, the five different sound speed estimation methods (i.e., coherent factor (CF), minimum average phase variance (MAPV), minimum average sum-of-absolute difference (MASAD), focus quality spectra (FQS), and modified nonlinear anisotropic difference (MNAD)) are evaluated with the tissue mimicking phantom and the in vivo breast data under the same condition. The pre-beamformed radio-frequency data (RF) for the tissue mimicking phantom and in vivo breast data are acquired using a 7.5-MHz linear array transducer with the SonixTouch research platform connected to the SonixDAQ parallel data acquisition system. In the phantom study, the five methods show considerable performance in estimating the optimal sound speed (i.e., 1450 ± 25 m/s). The CF and FQS methods also show the low errors in the in vivo breast study, but the MAPV, MASAD and MNAD methods have difficulty in estimating the optimal sound speed (1530 m/s) i.e., 25.0 ± 12.9 and 20.0 ± 8.2 vs. 72.5 ± 45.0, 72.5 ± 41.9, 52.5 ± 28.7, respectively. These results indicated that the CF and FQS methods can robustly estimate the optimal sound speed in the homogenous phantom and heterogeneous soft tissues (e.g., breast).
  • Keywords
    biomedical ultrasonics; mammography; phantoms; ultrasonic transducer arrays; ultrasonic velocity; FQS; MAPV; MASAD; SonixDAQ parallel data acquisition system; SonixTouch research platform; breast tissue; coherent factor; constant sound speed; dynamic receive beamforming; focus quality spectra; frequency 7.5 MHz; image quality defocusing; image quality degradation; in vivo evaluation; linear array transducer; medical ultrasound imaging; minimum average phase variance; minimum average sum-of-absolute difference; modified nonlinear anisotropic difference MNAD; optimal sound speed; soft tissues; sound speed estimation methods; tissue mimicking phantom; Breast; Estimation; In vivo; Phantoms; Radio frequency; Ultrasonic imaging; Breast; Optimal sound speed; Ultrasound imaging;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2014 IEEE International
  • Conference_Location
    Chicago, IL
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ULTSYM.2014.0416
  • Filename
    6932192