DocumentCode
3094409
Title
Spatial coherence and its relationship to human tissue: An analytical description of imaging methods
Author
Pinton, Gianmarco ; Trahey, Gregg ; Dahl, Jeremy
Author_Institution
Centre Nat. de la Rech. Sci., France
fYear
2013
fDate
21-25 July 2013
Firstpage
1288
Lastpage
1291
Abstract
This paper describes the spatial coherence properties of the signal backscattered by human tissue and measured by an ultrasound transducer. Fourier acoustics are used to describe the propagation of ultrasound through a model of tissue that includes multiple reverberations and random scatterers in the imaging plane. The theoretical development describes the evolution of the spatial coherence as it propagates through the near-field tissue layers, is reflected at the focus, and is received at the transducer surface. Simulations are used to propagate the acoustic field through a histologically measured representation of the human abdomen and to validate the theoretical predictions. In vivo measurements performed with a diagnostic ultrasound scanner demonstrate show that simulations and theory closely match the measured spatial coherence characteristics in the human body. The theoretical framework and simulations are then used to describe the physics of spatial coherence imaging, a type of ultrasound imaging that measures tissue´s scattering properties with high resolution and contrast.
Keywords
biological tissues; biomedical transducers; biomedical ultrasonics; ultrasonic transducers; Fourier acoustics; diagnostic ultrasound scanner; human abdomen; human body; human tissue; in vivo measurements; near-field tissue layers; random scatterers; signal backscattering; spatial coherence imaging; spatial coherence properties; tissue scattering; ultrasound imaging; ultrasound transducer; Coherence; Imaging; Reverberation; Spatial coherence; Transducers; Ultrasonic imaging;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2013 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Prague
ISSN
1948-5719
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-5684-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ULTSYM.2013.0329
Filename
6724932
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