DocumentCode :
3094511
Title :
3D Intra-cardiac flow estimation using speckle tracking: A feasibility study in synthetic ultrasound data
Author :
Hang Gao ; Heyde, Brecht ; D´hooge, J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Cardiovascular Sci., KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
fYear :
2013
fDate :
21-25 July 2013
Firstpage :
68
Lastpage :
71
Abstract :
In recent years, echo particle image velocimetry (EPIV) has been proposed to characterize intra-cardiac flow fields noninvasively. To date, these methods remain two dimensional (2D). As volumetric cardiac ultrasound has become more readily available and as this may avoid some of the problems inherent to 2D imaging (i.e. out-of-plane flow), the aim of this study was to test whether EPIV could be extended to three dimensions using synthetic data sets. A typical inflow velocity profile and a dynamic LV volume change profile combined with a three-dimensional (3D) anatomical model of the LV were used to build a realistic computational fluid dynamics (CFD) flow vector field (Fluent 12.1, ANSYS). 3D B-mode image sequences were acquired using a fast ultrasound simulator (COLE) of virtual contrast bubbles moving along this 3D flow field (frequency = 4.5MHz; sampling frequency = 50MHz; 50×50 degrees opening angle; frame rate = 113 Hz; image size 120×60×60mm). Inter-frame motion during diastasis was estimated by volumetric speckle tracking (kernel 0.65×6.70×6.70mm; search region 4.96×9.71×8.85mm; overlap 40%×90%×90%) using 3D normalized cross-correlation as a similarity metric. Cubic spline interpolation was embedded for subsample motion estimation prior to median filtering (6.34×4.73×4.75mm) of the resulting velocity vector field. Regression and correlation coefficients as well as the estimate error of the tracking velocity field with the CFD reference ground truth were calculated. The relative point-wise velocity vector error averaged over the period of E wave, A wave and systole were 14.66 ± 2.66%, 12.61 ± 1.15%, 14.00 ± 7.60% respectively. The flow field obtained through speckle tracking agreed well with the ones measured from CFD when the velocity amplitude was below 0.35 m/s. However, for larger velocities, the regional motion was underestimated.
Keywords :
blood flow measurement; bubbles; computational fluid dynamics; echocardiography; flow simulation; image sampling; image sequences; median filters; medical image processing; motion estimation; regression analysis; speckle; ultrasonic imaging; 2D imaging; 3D B-mode image sequences; 3D intracardiac flow estimation; 3D normalized cross-correlation; CFD; Fluent 12.1 ANSYS; correlation coefficients; cubic spline interpolation; diastasis; dynamic LV volume change profile; echo particle image velocimetry; error estimation; fast ultrasound simulator; frequency 4.5 MHz; frequency 50 MHz; inflow velocity profile; interframe motion; intracardiac flow fields; median filtering; out-of-plane flow; realistic computational fluid dynamics flow vector field; regression coefficients; relative point-wise velocity vector error; sampling frequency; speckle tracking; subsample motion estimation; synthetic data sets; synthetic ultrasound data; three-dimensional anatomical model; velocity vector field; virtual contrast bubbles; volumetric cardiac ultrasound; volumetric speckle tracking; Computational fluid dynamics; Imaging; Speckle; Three-dimensional displays; Tracking; Ultrasonic imaging; Vectors;
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.2013.0018
Filename :
6724939
Link To Document :
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