DocumentCode :
2356422
Title :
P3D-4 3D Breast Elastography with a Combined Ultrasound/Tomography System
Author :
Booi, R.C. ; Donnell, M.O. ; Knoth, M.M. ; Xie, H. ; Rubin, J.M. ; Hall, A.L. ; Carson, P.L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI
fYear :
2006
fDate :
2-6 Oct. 2006
Firstpage :
2056
Lastpage :
2059
Abstract :
We have produced high quality strain images in a breast phantom and in 7 human subjects with 3D ultrasound (US) breast elastography using a combined US/tomography system. All radiofrequency (RF) images in this study were acquired using a GE Logiq 9 scanner and a linear 1D array operating at 7.5 MHz on a stand-alone, mammography-mimicking unit. To determine 3D elastography efficacy, a breast phantom (ATS BB-1) was imaged using static compression at 0.5% axial steps up to 2.5% strain over 7-17 elevational steps with slice thicknesses 15-60% of the elevational beamwidth. RF images were correlated using 3D, phase-sensitive speckle tracking algorithms and accumulated, estimated displacements were converted to strain images. Image quality was assessed via correlation coefficient (R) and strain contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR). Results indicated that R remained high and nearly constant (0.96-0.98) for a 0.5% strain step under all conditions. Elevational slice thicknesses of les 30% of the elevational beamwidth sizes produced the highest CNR because thicker slices did not sufficiently meet Nyquist requirements. At slice thicknesses of 35% elevational beamwidth, at least 7 elevational slices were required to meet 3D speckle tracking algorithm spatial requirements in the elevational direction (filter ges kernel = 1 elevational speckle spot). Moving beyond these minimum requirements produced the greatest improvement in CNR with 3D tracking: acquiring elevational planes over 3 speckle spots produced a 90% CNR improvement over 2D analogous. Acquiring up to 4.5 speckle spots (17 elevational planes) increased the CNR by a total of 130%. Additionally, elevational slices off the center axis confirmed on-axis results. Human subject motion was addressed before applying these results in vivo. Volume data acquisition must occur within a patient breath hold (les 10 sec). Thus, all 7 human subjects (1 cancer, 6 fibroadenomas) were imaged using quasistatic elastography as they held their brea- th. Five axial compression steps were acquired at 0.3-0.7% strain for 7-11 elevational planes with slice thicknesses 30% of the elevational beamwidth (spatially equivalent to 2.0-4.6 speckle spots). When minimal out-of-plane motion was present, there was no significant difference in correlation coefficient values created from 3D and fast (<0.5 sec) 2D acquisition. Thus, potential motion artifacts introduced by 3D data acquisition have been minimized. Of the 7 lesions imaged, 3 were visible on both 3D and 2D and elastograms, with the 3D elastograms depicting CNRepsiv of 7-11% better than 2D. This suggests that 3D elastography on the combined system holds great potential for improving an already clinically valuable imaging technique
Keywords :
acoustic tomography; biological techniques; biological tissues; biomedical ultrasonics; 3D speckle tracking algorithms; 3D ultrasound breast elastography; 7.5 MHz; ATS BB-1; GE Logiq 9 scanner; breast phantom; cancer; correlation coefficient; elastograms; fibroadenomas; quasistatic elastography; strain contrast-to-noise ratio; strain images; ultrasound-tomography system; Breast; Capacitive sensors; Data acquisition; Humans; Image coding; Imaging phantoms; Radio frequency; Speckle; Tomography; Ultrasonic imaging;
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.2006.505
Filename :
4152361
Link To Document :
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