Title :
Automatic Measurement of Human Subcutaneous Fat with Ultrasound
Author :
Ng, Jessie ; Rohling, Robert ; Lawrence, Peter D.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. & Electr. Eng., Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
fDate :
8/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper presents an approach to measure human subcutaneous fat thickness automatically using ultrasound radio frequency (RF) signals. We propose using spatially compounded spectrum properties extracted from the RF signals of ultrasound for the purpose of fat boundary detection. Our fat detection framework consists of 4 main steps. The first step is to capture RF data from 11 ultrasound beam angles and at 4 different focal positions. Second, spectrum dispersion is calculated from the local spectrum of RF data using the shorttime Fourier transform and moment analysis. The values of the spectrum dispersion are encoded as gray-scale parametric images. Third, averaging is used to reduce speckle noise in the parametric image and improve the visualization of the subcutaneous fat layer. Finally, we apply Rosiniquests thresholding and random sample consensus boundary detection to extract the fat boundary. Our method was applied on 36 samples obtained in vivo at the suprailiac, thigh, and triceps of 9 human participants. In our study, high correlations between the manual and automatic ultrasound measurements (r > 0.7 at all body sites), and between the skinfold caliper and automatic ultrasound measurements (r > 0.7 at all body sites) were observed.
Keywords :
biomedical measurement; biomedical ultrasonics; edge detection; image denoising; medical image processing; thickness measurement; ultrasonic imaging; Rosin thresholding; automatic ultrasonic measurement; fat boundary detection; fat boundary extraction; gray scale parametric images; human subcutaneous fat thickness measurement; local RF data spectrum; moment analysis; random sample consensus boundary detection; shorttime Fourier transform; spatially compounded spectrum properties; speckle noise reduction; spectrum dispersion; subcutaneous fat layer visualization; ultrasound radiofrequency signals; Anthropometry; Data mining; Fourier transforms; Frequency measurement; Humans; RF signals; Radio frequency; Thickness measurement; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement; Abdomen; Adult; Algorithms; Arm; Biometry; Female; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Male; Skinfold Thickness; Subcutaneous Fat; Thigh; Ultrasonography;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2009.1229