A Dynamic Ultrasound Phantom with Tissue‐Mimicking Mechanical and Acoustic Properties

Author:

Fernandez Sara V.12,Kim Jin‐Hoon1,Sadat David1,Marcus Colin13,Suh Emma14,Mclntosh Rachel13,Shah Aastha1,Dagdeviren Canan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Media Lab Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA

2. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA

3. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA

Abstract

AbstractTissue‐mimicking phantoms are valuable tools that aid in improving the equipment and training available to medical professionals. However, current phantoms possess limited utility due to their inability to precisely simulate multiple physical properties simultaneously, which is crucial for achieving a system understanding of dynamic human tissues. In this work, novel materials design and fabrication processes to produce various tissue‐mimicking materials (TMMs) for skin, adipose, muscle, and soft tissue at a human scale are developed. Target properties (Young's modulus, density, speed of sound, and acoustic attenuation) are first defined for each TMM based on literature. Each TMM recipe is developed, associated mechanical and acoustic properties are characterized, and the TMMs are confirmed to have comparable mechanical and acoustic properties with the corresponding human tissues. Furthermore, a novel sacrificial core to fabricate a hollow, ellipsoid‐shaped bladder phantom complete with inlet and outlet tubes, which allow liquids to flow through and expand this phantom, is adopted. This dynamic bladder phantom with realistic mechanical and acoustic properties to human tissues in combination with the developed skin, soft tissue, and subcutaneous adipose tissue TMMs, culminates in a human scale torso tank and electro‐mechanical system that can be systematically utilized for characterizing various medical imaging devices.

Funder

MIT Media Lab

Publisher

Wiley

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