Title :
Clinical multi-push acoustic radiation force for evaluation of renal transplant status
Author :
Scola, Mallory R. ; Baggesen, Leslie M. ; Wu, Chih-Da ; Detwiler, Randy K. ; Chong, Wui K. ; Jang, So Yoon ; Burke, Lauren M B ; Jernigan, Kristel L. ; Caughey, Melissa C. ; Fisher, Melrose W. ; Zhu, Hongtu ; Whitehead, Sonya B. ; Gallippi, Caterina M.
Author_Institution :
Joint Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
Abstract :
Invasive biopsy is currently the gold standard for assessment of renal transplant health. The need for biopsy may be reduced as suitable, noninvasive imaging methods become available. An imaging technique that exploits the viscoelastic properties of renal tissue could be relevant as a biopsy alternative, given that normal renal pelvis and parenchyma have different viscoelastic properties, while renal disease or rejection may result in altered mechanical relationships between pelvis and parenchyma. We hypothesize that MP-ARF, which qualitatively evaluates the viscoelastic properties of tissue, is relevant for noninvasively assessing viscoelastic similarity between pelvis and parenchyma in renal transplant patient volunteers. Regional ratios of marginal peak displacement (MPD) and first peak measurements were significantly different (p <; 0.05) in moderate vascular disease and chronic allograft nephropathy, respectively, relative to control. This suggests that MP ARF could be a relevant clinical technique for noninvasively discriminating renal transplant health.
Keywords :
biological tissues; biomechanics; biomedical measurement; biomedical ultrasonics; cellular biophysics; diseases; prosthetics; viscoelasticity; chronic allograft nephropathy; clinical multipush acoustic radiation force; first peak measurements; gold standard; invasive biopsy; moderate vascular disease; noninvasive imaging methods; noninvasively assessing viscoelasticity; noninvasively discriminating renal transplant health; normal renal pelvis; parenchyma; pelvis; relevant clinical technique; renal disease; renal tissue; renal transplant patient volunteers; renal transplant status evaluation; viscoelastic properties; Acoustics; Biopsy; Diseases; Imaging; Kidney; Pelvis; Ultrasonic imaging; Multi-Push Acoustic radiation force; kidney; rejection; transplant;
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2011 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1253-1
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2011.6293638