Title :
RF-based motion estimation using non-rigid image registration techniques: In-silico and in-vivo feasibility
Author :
Heyde, Brecht ; Alessandrini, M. ; Ling Tong ; D´hooge, J.
Author_Institution :
Cardiovascular Imaging & Dynamics, Univ. of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
Abstract :
US deformation techniques can roughly be divided in block matching (BM) and non-rigid image registration (NRIR). Motion can be extracted from the radio-frequency (RF) signals, from their envelope, or from the B-mode data. RF-based BM is known to outperform B-mode tracking in a small displacement setting, whereas NRIR has only been applied to B-mode data. The aim of this study was to test the feasibility of RF-based NRIR in-silico and in-vivo. First, synthetic 2D images of a phantom with a soft inclusion undergoing an axial compression (0.25%) were simulated. Its performance was assessed by varying the inclusion thickness (range: 2-20 mm in 2 mm steps) and stiffness (resulting strain range: 0.50%-1.50% in 0.25% steps). Both RF and envelope tracking were better at identifying smaller and more subtle inclusions compared to B-mode tracking (down to 8 mm and 6 mm resp.). Furthermore, when tracking the RF instead of their envelope, inclusion borders were more sharply defined (border size 2.57 mm vs 4.88 mm, p<;0.001) and strain errors in the inclusion were lower (0.08% vs 0.10%; p<;0.05). Next, NRIR was used to track the septum of a healthy volunteer from high frame rate US recordings (436 Hz), and compared against a recent RF-based BM method. In-vivo tracking revealed that RF-based BM and RF-based NRIR performed similarly, both producing physiological axial velocity and strain curves. The lateral components could only be estimated using NRIR.
Keywords :
acoustic signal processing; bioacoustics; biomedical ultrasonics; phantoms; ultrasonic imaging; ultrasonic velocity; B-mode tracking; NRIR; RF-based motion estimation; axial compression; high frame rate ultrasound recordings; in-silico feasibility; in-vivo feasibility; nonrigid image registration; phantom; physiological axial velocity-strain curves; radio-frequency signals; septum; size 2 mm to 20 mm; soft inclusion; ultrasound deformation method; Phantoms; RF signals; Radio frequency; Sensitivity; Strain; Tracking; B-mode; Non-rigid registration; RF; Strain;
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2014.0568