DocumentCode
2354342
Title
P2B-5 Quantification of Flow Using Ultrasound and Microbubbles: A Disruption Replenishment Model Based on Physical Principles
Author
Hudson, John M. ; Karshafian, Raffi ; Burns, Peter N.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Med. Biophys., Toronto Univ., Ont.
fYear
2006
fDate
2-6 Oct. 2006
Firstpage
1588
Lastpage
1591
Abstract
With contrast agents, ultrasound can make hemodynamic measurements in microvascular networks with the technique of disruption replenishment. In its current form, the method suffers from poor reproducibility and accuracy, largely due to the inappropriate use of a mono-exponential model for fitting the time replenishment data. In reality, the time-intensity replenishment curve reflects the hemodynamics and morphology of the vascular system being measured, the ultrasound field distribution and microbubble properties. Here, we introduce an analytic replenishment model that attempts to account for these parameters and compare its performance to the established model in a flow phantom. Specifically, the proposed model 1) incorporates the hemodynamic properties of the flow system (velocity distribution and vascular cross section), 2) includes the elevation and axial plane pressure distributions and 3) accounts for the distinct high and low MI disruption and detection boundaries. Compared to the currently accepted mono-exponential model, the presented model shows better agreement in both the quality of the fit and estimation of velocity (~5-10% vs. 20% error) for the same flow and acoustic conditions
Keywords
biomedical ultrasonics; bubbles; flow visualisation; haemodynamics; ultrasonics; contrast agents; detection boundaries; disruption replenishment model; flow quantification; hemodynamic measurements; high mechanical index disruption; low mechanical index disruption; microbubbles; microvascular networks; pressure distributions; time-intensity replenishment curve; ultrasound field distribution; vascular cross section; vascular system morphology; velocity distribution; Biophysics; Blood; Equations; Fluid flow measurement; Hemodynamics; Morphology; Reproducibility of results; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement; Volume measurement;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Ultrasonics Symposium, 2006. IEEE
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
ISSN
1051-0117
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0201-8
Electronic_ISBN
1051-0117
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ULTSYM.2006.402
Filename
4152258
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