DocumentCode
3324029
Title
Fine elasticity imaging utilizing the refined iterative rf-echo phase matching algorithm
Author
Sumi, C. ; Nakayama, K. ; Kubota, M.
Author_Institution
Japan Soc. for the Promotion of Sci., Japan
Volume
2
fYear
1997
fDate
5-8 Oct 1997
Firstpage
1521
Abstract
It is quite remarkable that the pathological state of living soft tissue highly correlates with quasi-static mechanical properties, i.e., particularly elasticity. With such a fact in mind, we previously developed “the iterative 2D rf-echo phase matching method” that determines the 2D displacement vector field generated in in vivo soft tissue during acquisition of two successive rf-echo data frames. That is, since this displacement measurement allows an accurate estimate of the resultant strain distributions to be obtained, we can stably quantify the tissue elasticity by determining the relative shear modulus distribution. Toward the finer elasticity imaging, we recently improved the previous displacement measurement method such that better phase matching can be realized. That is, we novelly incorporate an effective mechanism into the previous one: the local region size is made suitably smaller during the iterative phase matching. This leads to improvement of the quality of the finally obtained elasticity image. The effectiveness was verified through simulation, and an experiment on in vitro pork and in vivo breast tissues
Keywords
acoustic correlation; biological tissues; biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; echo; elasticity; iterative methods; medical signal processing; shear modulus; signal reconstruction; 2D displacement vector field; displacement measurement; elasticity; fine elasticity imaging; in vitro pork; in vivo breast tissues; in vivo soft tissue; living soft tissue; local region size; pathological state; quality; quasi-static mechanical properties; refined iterative rf-echo phase matching algorithm; relative shear modulus distribution; simulation; strain distributions; two successive rf-echo data frames; Biological tissues; Displacement measurement; Elasticity; Frequency conversion; In vitro; In vivo; Iterative methods; Mechanical factors; Pathology; Strain measurement;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Ultrasonics Symposium, 1997. Proceedings., 1997 IEEE
Conference_Location
Toronto, Ont.
ISSN
1051-0117
Print_ISBN
0-7803-4153-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ULTSYM.1997.661865
Filename
661865
Link To Document