Title :
A new time-domain narrowband velocity estimation technique for Doppler ultrasound flow imaging. I. Theory
Author :
Vaitkus, Peter J. ; Cobbold, Richard S C
Author_Institution :
Defense & Civil Inst. of Environ. Med., Toronto, Ont., Canada
fDate :
7/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A significant improvement in blood velocity estimation accuracy can be achieved by simultaneously processing both temporal and spatial information obtained from a sample volume. Use of the spatial information becomes especially important when the temporal resolution is limited. By using a two-dimensional sequence of spatially sampled Doppler signal "snapshots" an improved estimate of the Doppler correlation matrix can be formed. Processing Doppler data in this fashion addresses the range-velocity spread nature of the distributed red blood cell target, leading to a significant reduction in spectral speckle. Principal component spectral analysis of the "snapshot" correlation matrix is shown to lead to a new and robust Doppler mode frequency estimator. By processing only the dominant subspace of the Doppler correlation matrix, the Cramer-Rao bounds on the estimation error of target velocity is significantly reduced in comparison to traditional narrowband blood velocity estimation methods and achieves almost the same local accuracy as a wideband estimator. A time-domain solution is given for the velocity estimate using the root-MUSIC algorithm, which makes the new estimator attractive for real-time implementation.
Keywords :
Doppler measurement; acoustic signal processing; biomedical ultrasonics; blood flow measurement; parameter estimation; spectral analysis; time-domain analysis; ultrasonic imaging; Cramer-Rao bound; Doppler ultrasound flow imaging; principal component spectral analysis; root-MUSIC algorithm; signal processing; snapshot correlation matrix; speckle; time-domain narrowband blood velocity estimation; two-dimensional sequence; Estimation error; Frequency estimation; Narrowband; Red blood cells; Robustness; Signal resolution; Spatial resolution; Speckle; Spectral analysis; Time domain analysis;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on