DocumentCode
1534467
Title
Accelerated focused ultrasound imaging
Author
Madore, Bruno ; White, P. Jason ; Thomenius, Kai ; Clement, Gregory T.
Author_Institution
Med. Sch., Dept. of Radiol., Harvard Univ., Boston, MA, USA
Volume
56
Issue
12
fYear
2009
fDate
12/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
2612
Lastpage
2623
Abstract
One of the most basic trade-offs in ultrasound imaging involves frame rate, depth, and number of lines. Achieving good spatial resolution and coverage requires a large number of lines, leading to decreases in frame rate. An even more serious imaging challenge occurs with imaging modes involving spatial compounding and 3-D/4-D imaging, which are severely limited by the slow speed of sound in tissue. The present work can overcome these traditional limitations, making ultrasound imaging many-fold faster. By emitting several beams at once, and by separating the resulting overlapped signals through spatial and temporal processing, spatial resolution and/or coverage can be increased by many-fold while leaving frame rates unaffected. The proposed approach can also be extended to imaging strategies that do not involve transmit beamforming, such as synthetic aperture imaging. Simulated and experimental results are presented where imaging speed is improved by up to 32-fold, with little impact on image quality. Object complexity has little impact on the method´s performance, and data from biological systems can readily be handled. The present work may open the door to novel multiplexed and/or multidimensional protocols considered impractical today.
Keywords
array signal processing; biomedical transducers; biomedical ultrasonics; medical signal processing; ultrasonic imaging; ultrasonic transducer arrays; 3D imaging; 4D imaging; accelerated focused ultrasound imaging; coverage increase; spatial compounding; spatial processing; spatial resolution increase; temporal processing; tissue sound speed; Acceleration; Acoustic imaging; Array signal processing; Biological system modeling; Biological systems; Focusing; Image quality; Signal processing; Spatial resolution; Ultrasonic imaging; Algorithms; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Ultrasonography;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-3010
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TUFFC.2009.1352
Filename
5307493
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