DocumentCode :
1304915
Title :
Monitoring of thermal therapy based on shear modulus changes: II. Shear wave imaging of thermal lesions
Author :
Arnal, Bastien ; Pernot, Mathieu ; Tanter, Mickael
Author_Institution :
Centre Nat. de la Rech. Sci., Ecole Super. de Phys. et de Chimie Industrielles de Paris (ESPCI) ParisTech, Paris, France
Volume :
58
Issue :
8
fYear :
2011
fDate :
8/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1603
Lastpage :
1611
Abstract :
The clinical applicability of high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) for noninvasive therapy is currently hampered by the lack of robust and real-time monitoring of tissue damage during treatment. The goal of this study is to show that the estimation of local tissue elasticity from shear wave imaging (SWI) can lead to a precise mapping of the lesion. HIFU treatment and monitoring were respectively performed using a confocal setup consisting of a 2.5-MHz single element transducer focused at 34 mm on ex vivo samples and an 8-MHz ultrasound diagnostic probe. Ultrasound-based strain imaging was combined with shear wave imaging on the same device. The SWI sequences consisted of 2 successive shear waves induced at different lateral positions. Each wave was created with pushing beams of 100 μs at 3 depths. The shear wave propagation was acquired at 17,000 frames/s, from which the elasticity map was recovered. HIFU sonications were interleaved with fast imaging acquisitions, allowing a duty cycle of more than 90%. Thus, elasticity and strain mapping was achieved every 3 s, leading to real-time monitoring of the treatment. When thermal damage occurs, tissue stiffness was found to increase up to 4-fold and strain imaging showed strong shrinkages that blur the temperature information. We show that strain imaging elastograms are not easy to interpret for accurate lesion characterization, but SWI provides a quantitative mapping of the thermal lesion. Moreover, the concept of shear wave thermometry (SWT) developed in the companion paper allows mapping temperature with the same method. Combined SWT and shear wave imaging can map the lesion stiffening and temperature outside the lesion, which could be used to predict the eventual lesion growth by thermal dose calculation. Finally, SWI is shown to be robust to motion and reliable in vivo on sheep muscle.
Keywords :
biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; biothermics; elastic waves; muscle; patient monitoring; patient treatment; shear modulus; HIFU sonications; distance 34 mm; elastograms; frequency 2.5 MHz; frequency 8 MHz; high intensity focused ultrasound; lesion mapping; local tissue elasticity; noninvasive therapy; shear modulus changes; shear wave imaging; shear wave propagation; shear wave thermometry; sheep muscle; single element transducer; strain imaging; thermal lesions; thermal therapy monitoring; time 100 mus; time 3 s; tissue damage; tissue stiffness; ultrasound diagnostic probe; Lesions; Monitoring; Muscles; Optical imaging; Real time systems; Strain; Animals; Elastic Modulus; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Linear Models; Liver; Models, Biological; Muscles; Sheep; Sonication; Swine; Turkey; Ultrasonic Therapy; Ultrasonography;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-3010
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2011.1987
Filename :
5995217
Link To Document :
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