Making sense of scattering: Seeing microstructure through shear waves

Author:

Annio Giacomo12ORCID,Holm Sverre3ORCID,Mangin Gabrielle1ORCID,Penney Jake1ORCID,Bacquët Raphael4,Mustapha Rami5ORCID,Darwish Omar5,Wittgenstein Anna Sophie5,Schregel Katharina6ORCID,Vilgrain Valérie47ORCID,Paradis Valérie78,Sølna Knut9,Nordsletten David Alexander510ORCID,Sinkus Ralph15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Vascular Translation Science, LVTS, U1148, National Institute for Health and Medical Research (INSERM), Paris, France.

2. Department of Physics and Computational Radiology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.

3. Department of Physics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.

4. Department of Radiology, Beaujon Hospital, Clichy, France.

5. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, London, UK.

6. Department of Neuroradiology, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany.

7. Inflammation Research Center, CRI, U1149, National Institute for Health and Medical Research (INSERM), Paris, France.

8. Department of Pathology, Beaujon Hospital, Clichy, France.

9. Department of Mathematics, University of California at Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA.

10. Department of Biomedical Engineering and Cardiac Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.

Abstract

The physics of shear waves traveling through matter carries fundamental insights into its structure, for instance, quantifying stiffness for disease characterization. However, the origin of shear wave attenuation in tissue is currently not properly understood. Attenuation is caused by two phenomena: absorption due to energy dissipation and scattering on structures such as vessels fundamentally tied to the material’s microstructure. Here, we present a scattering theory in conjunction with magnetic resonance imaging, which enables the unraveling of a material’s innate constitutive and scattering characteristics. By overcoming a three-order-of-magnitude scale difference between wavelength and average intervessel distance, we provide noninvasively a macroscopic measure of vascular architecture. The validity of the theory is demonstrated through simulations, phantoms, in vivo mice, and human experiments and compared against histology as gold standard. Our approach expands the field of imaging by using the dispersion properties of shear waves as macroscopic observable proxies for deciphering the underlying ultrastructures.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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