Dynamic Mode Decomposition for Transient Cavitation Bubbles Imaging in Pulsed High Intensity Focused Ultrasound Therapy

Author:

Song MinhoORCID,Sapozhnikov Oleg A.ORCID,Khokhlova Vera A.ORCID,Khokhlova Tatiana D.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractPulsed high-intensity focused ultrasound (pHIFU) can induce sparsede novoinertial cavitation without the introduction of exogenous contrast agents, promoting mild mechanical disruption in targeted tissue. Because the bubbles are small and rapidly dissolve after each HIFU pulse, mapping transient bubbles and obtaining real-time quantitative metrics correlated to tissue damage are challenging. Prior work introduced Bubble Doppler, an ultrafast power Doppler imaging method as a sensitive means to map cavitation bubbles. The main limitation of that method was its reliance on conventional wall filters used in Doppler imaging and optimized for imaging blood flow rather than transient scatterers. This study explores Bubble Doppler enhancement using dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) of a matrix created from a Doppler ensemble for mapping and extracting the characteristics of transient cavitation bubbles. DMD was first testedin silicowith a numerical dataset mimicking the spatiotemporal characteristics of backscattered signal from tissue and bubbles. The performance of DMD filter was compared to other widely used Doppler wall filters - singular value decomposition (SVD) and infinite impulse response (IIR) highpass filter. DMD was then applied to anex vivotissue dataset where each HIFU pulse was immediately followed by a plane wave Doppler ensemble.In silicoDMD outperformed SVD and IIR high pass filter andex vivoprovided physically interpretable images of the modes associated with bubbles and their corresponding temporal decay rates. These DMD modes can be trackable over the duration of pHIFU treatment using k-means clustering method, resulting in quantitative indicators of treatment progression.Abstract Figure

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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