DocumentCode :
1958601
Title :
A comparative study of optimal fundamental, second- and superharmonic imaging
Author :
van Neer, P.L.M.J. ; Danilouchkine, M.G. ; Matte, G.M. ; Voormolen, M.M. ; Verweij, M.D. ; de Jong, N.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, Netherlands
fYear :
2010
fDate :
11-14 Oct. 2010
Firstpage :
2183
Lastpage :
2186
Abstract :
A number of ultrasound methods are available for medical imaging. Fundamental imaging uses the echoes from the same spectral band as the transmitted pulse. Tissue harmonic imaging (THI) utilizes frequencies at multiple(s) of the fundamental and effectively suppresses reverberations, and off-axis and near-field artifacts. Two types of THI comprise secondand superharmonic imaging (SHI). The former uses the second harmonic of the echoes and the latter combines the third to fifth harmonics. Clinical research showed that the optimal transmit frequency for fundamental and second harmonic cardiac imaging is 3.5 and 1.8 MHz respectively. As the level of the harmonics is determined by a balance of nonlinear propagation and attenuation, the optimal frequency for SHI is expected to be lower. The first goal of this study was to investigate the optimal transmit frequency for SHI by simulating the entire imaging chain based on an adapted SONAR equation. Two simulation cases are examined: the first uses cardiac tissue properties and the second is based on a mix of 50% cardiac tissue and 50% blood. Using the SONAR equation the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the second to fifth harmonics was computed up to 15 cm for 1 2.5 MHz transmit frequencies. The transducer´s transmit and receive transfer was modeled, as well as its noise. The adaptation included nonlinear forward propagation calculated with axisymmetric KZK, the backpropagation was linear. The highest frequency yielding a 30 dB dynamic range at the required imaging depth was assumed optimal. The second goal of this study was to compare the beams produced by optimal fundamental, second and SHI for cardiac applications. To this end we used a 3D KZK implementation for rectangular apertures. The optimal transmit frequency for SHI was 1.0 1.2 MHz at 13 cm using cardiac tissue properties, this increased to 1.7 MHz if the properties of the cardiac tissue/blood mix were used. The -6 dB lateral beam width of the optimal fundamental, - - secondand SHI at 10 cm was 1.2, 1 and 0.7 cm respectively. The normalized intensity 1 cm off the beam axis was -14, -20 and -25 dB for the fundamental, second harmonic and superharmonic respectively. The optimal transmit frequency for cardiac SHI is 1.0 1.7 MHz providing a feasible dynamic range. The lateral resolution of SHI in the far field is higher compared to fundamental and second harmonic imaging.
Keywords :
acoustic signal processing; biological tissues; biomedical transducers; biomedical ultrasonics; blood; cardiology; harmonic generation; medical signal processing; nonlinear acoustics; ultrasonic absorption; ultrasonic propagation; ultrasonic transducers; 3D KZK implementation; SNR; THI; cardiac tissue properties; cardiac tissue-blood mixture; distance 0.7 cm; distance 1 cm; distance 1.2 cm; distance 13 cm; echo fifth harmonic; echo fourth harmonic; echo second harmonic; echo third harmonic; echoes; frequency 1.0 MHz to 2.5 MHz; frequency 3.5 MHz; fundamental harmonic cardiac imaging; linear backpropagation; near field artifact suppression; nonlinear forward propagation; nonlinear ultrasonic propagation; off axis artifact suppression; optimal fundamental harmonic imaging; optimal transmit frequency; rectangular apertures; reverberation suppression; second harmonic cardiac imaging; second harmonic imaging; signal-noise ratio; sonar equation; superharmonic imaging; tissue harmonic imaging; transducer transmit-receive transfer; transmitted pulse spectral band; ultrasonic attenuation; ultrasound medical imaging methods; Acoustic beams; Blood; Cardiac tissue; Harmonic analysis; Imaging; Signal to noise ratio; Transducers; beam comparison; lateral resolution; optimal transmission frequency; second harmonic imaging; superharmonic imaging;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2010 IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
ISSN :
1948-5719
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0382-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2010.5935761
Filename :
5935761
Link To Document :
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