Title :
Lagrangian speckle model and tissue-motion estimation-theory [ultrasonography]
Author :
Maurice, Roch L. ; Bertrand, Michel
Author_Institution :
Ecole Polytech., Montreal, Que., Canada
fDate :
7/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
It is known that when a tissue is subjected to movements such as rotation, shearing, scaling, etc., changes in speckle patterns that result act as a noise source, often responsible for most of the displacement-estimate variance. From a modeling point of view, these changes can be thought of as resulting from two mechanisms: one is the motion of the speckles and the other, the alterations of their morphology. In this paper, the authors propose a new tissue-motion estimator to counteract these speckle decorrelation effects. The estimator is based on a Lagrangian description of the speckle motion. This description allows the authors to follow local characteristics of the speckle field as if they were a material property. This method leads to an analytical description of the decorrelation in a way which enables the derivation of an appropriate inverse filter for speckle restoration. The filter is appropriate for linear geometrical transformation of the scattering function (LT), i.e., a constant-strain region of interest (ROI). As the LT itself is a parameter of the filter, a tissue-motion estimator can be formulated as a nonlinear minimization problem, seeking the best match between the pre-tissue-motion image and a restored-speckle post-motion image. The method is tested, using simulated radio-frequency (RF) images of tissue undergoing axial shear.
Keywords :
biological tissues; biomedical ultrasonics; medical image processing; motion estimation; physiological models; speckle; Lagrangian speckle model; analytical description; axial shear; constant-strain region of interest; decorrelation; inverse filter; linear geometrical transformation; medical diagnostic imaging; nonlinear minimization problem; rotation; scaling; scattering function; shearing; simulated radiofrequency images; speckle restoration; tissue-motion estimation theory; ultrasonic imaging; ultrasonography; Decorrelation; Filters; Image restoration; Lagrangian functions; Morphology; Motion estimation; Radio frequency; Shearing; Speckle; Ultrasonography; Biomechanics; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Models, Theoretical; Muscles;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on