Affiliation:
1. Université de Strasbourg
2. University Hospital of Strasbourg
3. RoDIn
Abstract
Elastography contrast imaging has great potential for the detection and
characterization of abnormalities in soft biological tissues to help
physicians in diagnosis. Transient shear-waves elastography has
notably shown promising results for a range of clinical applications.
In biological soft tissues such as muscle, high mechanical anisotropy
implies different stiffness estimations depending on the direction of
the measurement. In this study, we propose the evolution of a
noise-correlation elastography approach for in-plane anisotropy
mapping. This method is shown to retrieve anisotropy from simulation
images before being validated on agarose anisotropic tissue-mimicking
phantoms, and the first results on in-vivo biological
fibrous tissues are presented.
Funder
Agence Nationale de la
Recherche
Institut des sciences de
l'ingénierie et des systèmes