DocumentCode
2000487
Title
Quantitative ultrasound for evaluating human cervical microstructure
Author
Reusch, Lisa M. ; Nam, Kibo ; Anderson, Janelle J. ; Feltovich, Helen ; Kliewer, Mark A. ; Harter, Josephine M. ; Hall, Timothy J.
Author_Institution
Med. Phys. Dept., Univ. of Wisconsin (UW), Madison, WI, USA
fYear
2009
fDate
20-23 Sept. 2009
Firstpage
2252
Lastpage
2255
Abstract
This study uses quantitative ultrasound techniques to investigate the possibility of monitoring changes in cervical microstructure with acoustic backscatter. Standard ¿general imaging¿ ultrasound transducers and a novel endocavity transducer were used to detect changes in the power spectrum of the ultrasonic backscattered echo signal as a function of the angle between the acoustic beam and the dominant macrostructure of cervix specimens from hysterectomy. The echo signal power was assessed by integrating the echo signal power spectrum between consistent frequency limits. The echo signal power was found to decrease as a function of steering angle. Normalizing the echo signal power to that found at 0° (acoustic beams normal to the cervical canal) it was found that there was a monotonically increasing loss of power with increasing beam angle, and that power loss was symmetric about 0°. Those data were then compared to identically acquired and processed data from phantoms with spherical scatterers. Data from phantoms with spherical scatterers serve as a normalization for the expected backscatter signal power loss (with increasing steering angle) that would be expected due to the loss of effective aperture and directivity of the transducer. The power loss from the cervix consistently exceeded that from the phantoms, was statistically significant for all angles greater than 50°, and the excess power loss is likely due to the presence of aligned collagen fibers in the cervical microstructure.
Keywords
backscatter; biomedical transducers; biomedical ultrasonics; medical signal processing; phantoms; acoustic backscatter; acoustic beams; cervical canal; cervix specimens; collagen fibers; echo signal power spectrum; endocavity transducers; human cervical microstructure; hysterectomy; phantoms; power loss; quantitative ultrasound; standard general imaging ultrasound transducers; steering angle; ultrasonic backscattered echo signal; Acoustic beams; Acoustic scattering; Acoustic transducers; Backscatter; Humans; Imaging phantoms; Microstructure; Monitoring; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic transducers;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2009 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Rome
ISSN
1948-5719
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-4389-5
Electronic_ISBN
1948-5719
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ULTSYM.2009.5441812
Filename
5441812
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