• DocumentCode
    71525
  • Title

    Axial Ultrasound B-Scans of the Entire Eye With a 20-MHz Linear Array: Correction of Crystalline Lens Phase Aberration by Applying Fermat´s Principle

  • Author

    Mateo, Tony ; Chang, Andrea ; Mofid, Y. ; Pisella, Pierre-Jean ; Ossant, F.

  • Author_Institution
    Imagerie et Cerveau, Univ. Francois-Rabelais de Tours, Tours, France
  • Volume
    33
  • Issue
    11
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Nov. 2014
  • Firstpage
    2149
  • Lastpage
    2166
  • Abstract
    In ophthalmic ultrasonography the crystalline lens is known to be the main source of phase aberration, causing a significant decrease in resolution and distortion effects on axial B-scans. This paper proposes a computationally efficient method to correct the phase aberration arising from the crystalline lens, including refraction effects using a bending ray tracing approach based on Fermat´s principle. This method is used as a basis to perform eye-adapted beamforming (BF), with appropriate focusing delays for a 128-element 20-MHz linear array in both emission and reception. Implementation was achieved on an in-house developed experimental ultrasound scanning device, the ECODERM. The proposed BF was tested in vitro by imaging a wire phantom through an eye phantom consisting of a synthetic gelatin lens anatomically set up in an appropriate liquid (turpentine) to approach the in vivo velocity ratio. Both extremes of accommodation shapes of the human crystalline lens were investigated. The performance of the developed BF was evaluated in relation to that in homogeneous medium and compared to a conventional delay-and-sum (DAS) BF and a second adapted BF which was simplified to ignore the lens refraction. Global expectations provided by our method with the transducer array are reviewed by an analysis quantifying both image quality and spatial fidelity, as well as the detrimental effects of a crystalline lens in conventional reconstruction. Compared to conventional array imaging, the results indicated a two-fold improvement in the lateral resolution, greater sensitivity and a considerable reduction of spatial distortions that were sufficient to envisage reliable biometry directly in B-mode, especially phakometry.
  • Keywords
    biomedical transducers; biomedical ultrasonics; distortion; eye; gelatin; image reconstruction; image resolution; light refraction; medical image processing; phantoms; ray tracing; vision defects; Fermat principle; axial ultrasound B-scans; bending ray tracing approach; biometry; crystalline lens phase aberration correction; delay-and-sum beamforming; eye-adapted; frequency 20 MHz; homogeneous medium; image quality; in vivo velocity ratio; lateral resolution; ophthalmic ultrasonography; phakometry; refraction effects; spatial distortion reduction; synthetic gelatin lens; transducer array; wire phantom imaging; Array signal processing; Arrays; Imaging; Lenses; Ray tracing; Shape; Ultrasonic imaging; Adapted beamforming; eye phantom; high frequency ultrasound; image enhancement (noise and artifact reduction); image reconstruction—iterative methods; linear array; minimization problem; ocular biometry; ray tracing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0062
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMI.2014.2332519
  • Filename
    6844893