Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80516, USA
Abstract
Resolution and target detectability in ultrasound imaging are directly tied to the size of the imaging array. This is particularly important for imaging at depth, such as in the detection and diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma and other lesions in the liver. Swept synthetic aperture (SSA) imaging has shown promise for building large effective apertures from small physical arrays using motion but has required bulky fixtures and external motion tracking for precise positioning. This study presents an approach that constrains the transducer motion with a simple linear sliding fixture and estimates motion from the ultrasound data itself using either speckle tracking or channel correlation. This work demonstrates, through simulation and phantom experiments, the ability of both techniques to accurately estimate lateral transducer motion and form SSA images with improved resolution and target detectability. In simulation, errors were observed under 83 μm across a 50 mm sweep, and improvements were found of up to 61% in resolution and up to 33% in lesion detectability experimentally even imaging through ex vivo tissue layers. This approach will increase the accessibility of SSA imaging and allow researchers to test its use in clinical settings.
Funder
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
Subject
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Computer Science Applications,Process Chemistry and Technology,General Engineering,Instrumentation,General Materials Science
Cited by
4 articles.
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