• DocumentCode
    3095170
  • Title

    Physiological flow characterization in elastic vessel phantom using Ultrasonic Particle Image Velocimetry

  • Author

    Ming Qian ; Lili Niu ; Weibao Qiu ; Congzhi Wang ; Yang Xiao ; Hairong Zheng

  • Author_Institution
    Paul C. Lauterbur Res. Center for Biomed. Imaging, Shenzhen Inst. of Adv. Technol., Shenzhen, China
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    21-25 July 2013
  • Firstpage
    2038
  • Lastpage
    2041
  • Abstract
    Altered vascular stiffness can influence hemodynamics in the long-term vessel stiffening process, which can be aggravated in a viscous cycle. Elucidation of how vascular stiffness and hemodynamics interact with each other, underpins insights into cardiovascular disease and its diagnosis. In our ultrasound measurement study, the affect of arterial stiffness on hemodynamics is investigated by simulated physiological flow in experimental elastic vessel phantoms based on a 10wt% polyvinyl alcohol aqueous solution that solidifies when subjected to up to 8 freeze-thaw (f-t) cycles. As the vascular phantoms are subjected to these f-t cycles, their Young´s modulus, speed of sound, and attenuation coefficients increase. Elastic phantoms of constant inner diameter were subjected to pressure increase in a fluid circuit, resulting in diameter and pulse pressure increments. It can be shown that increased vascular stiffness causes degraded vasomotion and elevated pulse pressure, indicating degradation in the function of blood pumping. Peak velocity measured by Doppler and Echo Particle Image Velocimetry (EchoPIV) techniques have bias less than 5% during the whole cardiac cycle. The EchoPIV results demonstrate parabolic velocity profiles for all three phantoms. Measured peak velocities demonstrate that the stiffer vessel has a smaller peak-to-peak value of velocity, while showing up a slight difference for their shear rate due to their relatively small stiffness differences. In summary, our experiments show that vascular stiffness has influence on vasomotion, flow pressure, flow velocity, and shear rate.
  • Keywords
    Doppler measurement; Young´s modulus; biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; blood flow measurement; blood pressure measurement; blood vessels; cardiovascular system; diseases; elastic constants; phantoms; shear flow; Doppler techniques; Echo Particle Image Velocimetry; EchoPIV; Young´s modulus; arterial stiffness; attenuation coefficient; blood pumping; cardiovascular disease; constant inner diameter; degraded vasomotion; diameter increments; elastic vessel phantoms; elevated pulse pressure; f-t cycles; flow pressure; flow velocity; fluid circuit; freeze-thaw cycles; hemodynamics; long-term vessel stiffening process; parabolic velocity profiles; peak velocity; physiological flow characterization; polyvinyl alcohol aqueous solution; pulse pressure increments; shear rate; sound speed; ultrasonic particle image velocimetry; ultrasound measurement study; velocity peak-to-peak value; viscous cycle; whole cardiac cycle; Doppler effect; Hemodynamics; Phantoms; Reservoirs; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement; Velocity measurement; Ultrasonic particle image velocimetry; arterial stiffness; hemodynamics; interaction;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2013 IEEE International
  • Conference_Location
    Prague
  • ISSN
    1948-5719
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-5684-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ULTSYM.2013.0520
  • Filename
    6724969