Title :
Spectral compensation for tissue attenuation and transmit intensity in ultrasonic detection of microbubbles by harmonic method
Author :
Chen, Shigao ; Fatemi, Mostafa ; McMahon, Eileen ; Greenleaf, James F. ; Belohlavek, Marek
Author_Institution :
Mayo Clinic Coll. of Medicine, Rochester, MN, USA
Abstract :
Tissue perfusion can be assessed by harmonic imaging of microbubbles which are highly nonlinear and produce strong harmonic components as they scatter the incident ultrasound. However, the harmonic magnitude also depends on the pressure of the transmitted ultrasound and the attenuation of the intervening tissues in the ultrasound path. Thus, the harmonic magnitude may not be a reliable indicator of the presence or absence of microbubbles, and hence, tissue perfusion. Here, we propose a parameter called harmonic to squared fundamental ratio (HSFR) that, under ideal conditions, completely compensates for the effects of tissue attenuation and transmit pressure for superior microbubble detection. In experiments, the target tested is 0.01% microbubble solution or water (as a control). The echoes from these targets obtained with different transmit pressures and attenuation pads are used to compute the HSFR. HSFR is able to separate the microbubble solutions from the control with a single threshold for all combinations of attenuation and transmit intensity tested.
Keywords :
biomedical ultrasonics; bubbles; error compensation; haemorheology; ultrasonic absorption; HSFR; attenuation pads; encapsulated gaseous microbubbles; harmonic contrast imaging; harmonic to squared fundamental ratio; microbubble solution; tissue attenuation spectral compensation; tissue perfusion; transmit intensity compensation; transmitted ultrasound pressure; ultrasonic microbubble detection; ultrasound contrast agents; Attenuation; Backscatter; Biomedical imaging; Educational institutions; Red blood cells; Rheology; Scattering; Testing; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic transducers;
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium, 2004 IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8412-1
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2004.1417927