非对比超声灌注成像

Jaime Tierney, D. Dumont, B. Byram
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引用次数: 3

摘要

能够估计低速血流的多普勒超声杂波滤波器可以大大提高超声作为临床诊断和监测工具的能力,包括血管疾病和肿瘤灌注的评估。传统的多普勒超声目前用于观察和估计血流。然而,传统的多普勒受帧率和由患者或超声医师不自主运动引起的组织杂波的限制。由于组织运动导致的杂波频谱展宽限制了超声在8MHz中心频率下检测血流小于5mm/s的能力。我们提出了一种杂波滤波技术,可以将多普勒测量的灵敏度提高到至少低至0.41mm/s。提出的滤波器采用自适应解调方案,降低杂波的带宽。为了测试自适应解调方法在去除超声仪手部运动方面的性能,6名志愿者从基本质量保证模型中获取数据。此外,为了测试初步的体内可行性,进行了动脉闭塞反应性充血研究,以评估所提出的过滤器在保持血流速度为2mm/s或更高时的信号效率。手部运动研究的初始平均带宽为577Hz (28.5mm/s),使用我们的方法在-60 dB的3cm处降低到7.28Hz (0.36mm/s)。体内功率多普勒研究结果显示,该滤波器与传统的50Hz高通滤波器的最低和最高血流时间点之间的动态范围分别为15.2dB和0.15dB。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Perfusion imaging with non-contrast ultrasound
A Doppler ultrasound clutter filter that enables estimation of low velocity blood flow could considerably improve ultrasound as a tool for clinical diagnosis and monitoring, including for the evaluation of vascular diseases and tumor perfusion. Conventional Doppler ultrasound is currently used for visualizing and estimating blood flow. However, conventional Doppler is limited by frame rate and tissue clutter caused by involuntary movement of the patient or sonographer. Spectral broadening of the clutter due to tissue motion limits ultrasound’s ability to detect blood flow less than about 5mm/s at an 8MHz center frequency. We propose a clutter filtering technique that may increase the sensitivity of Doppler measurements to at least as low as 0.41mm/s. The proposed filter uses an adaptive demodulation scheme that decreases the bandwidth of the clutter. To test the performance of the adaptive demodulation method at removing sonographer hand motion, six volunteer subjects acquired data from a basic quality assurance phantom. Additionally, to test initial in vivo feasibility, an arterial occlusion reactive hyperemia study was performed to assess the efficiency of the proposed filter at preserving signals from blood velocities 2mm/s or greater. The hand motion study resulted in initial average bandwidths of 577Hz (28.5mm/s), which were decreased to 7.28Hz (0.36mm/s) at -60 dB at 3cm using our approach. The in vivo power Doppler study resulted in 15.2dB and 0.15dB dynamic ranges between the lowest and highest blood flow time points for the proposed filter and conventional 50Hz high pass filter, respectively.
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