DocumentCode
2478661
Title
P3C-12 Combining Spectral and Intensity Data to Identify Regions of Cavitation in Ultrasound Images; Application to HIFU
Author
Hsieh, Chang-yu ; Smith, Penny Probert ; Leslie, Tom ; Kennedy, James ; Ye, Guoliang ; Mayia, Fares
Author_Institution
Univ. of Oxford, Oxford
fYear
2007
fDate
28-31 Oct. 2007
Firstpage
1800
Lastpage
1803
Abstract
The high power intensities in HIFU often result in bubble production, either through cavitation or boiling, which are believed to be a primary contributor to tissue necrosis Bubbles are associated with the appearance of bright hyperechoic regions in ultrasound B-mode images are observed from the bubbles. As they are often the only changes observed during treatment on tissue, some HIFU protocols rely on hyperechoicity as the indicator of tissue lesions. It would be useful clinically to keep a history of cavitation events during treatment which could be recalled on demand to assist planning. A reliable method of determining not just the presence of cavitation but its location is required for this. This paper introduces an active method of cavitation detection through analyzing spectrally the r.f. signal from an imaging transducer which interrogates the region on a pixel by pixel basis. Particular challenges are due to the limited bandwidth of the transducer and to provide good spatial and spectral resolution. Application to ex vivo pig liver using ARMA modeling on time series r.f. data shows that spectral information can be determined at a spatial resolution of about 1 mm. The results of spectral estimation are used together with B-mode segmentation in a statistical algorithm to enhance the overall reliability of automatic cavitation detection.
Keywords
biological tissues; biomedical transducers; biomedical ultrasonics; bubbles; cavitation; image resolution; image segmentation; liver; medical image processing; patient treatment; statistical analysis; ultrasonic transducers; ARMA modeling; B-mode segmentation; HIFU; HIFU protocols; automatic cavitation detection; autoregressive moving average series; bright hyperechoic regions; bubbles; ex vivo pig liver; high intensity focused ultrasound transducer; hyperechoicity indicator; image segmentation; spatial resolution; spectral - intensity data integration; spectral information estimation; statistical algorithm; tissue lesions indicator; tissue necrosis; tissue treatment; ultrasound B-mode images; History; Image analysis; Lesions; Pixel; Production; Protocols; Signal analysis; Spatial resolution; Transducers; Ultrasonic imaging;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Ultrasonics Symposium, 2007. IEEE
Conference_Location
New York, NY
ISSN
1051-0117
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1384-3
Electronic_ISBN
1051-0117
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ULTSYM.2007.453
Filename
4410026
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