Title :
Speckle reduction of medical ultrasound using Compressive Re-Sampling and instantaneous SNR
Author :
Mammone, Richard ; Barinov, Lev ; Jairaj, Ajit ; Hulbert, William ; Podilchuk, Christine
Author_Institution :
Dept. of ECE, Rutgers Univ., Piscataway, NJ, USA
Abstract :
Medical Ultrasonography is a valuable imaging technology for medical diagnostics and to guide interventional procedures. However, ultrasound imaging suffers from speckle noise, an inherent characteristic of all coherent imaging techniques due to the presence of sub-resolution scatterers. Speckle noise produces a reduction in contrast resolution which is responsible for the overall lower effective resolution of ultrasound compared to x-ray or MRI imaging. In the case of breast imaging, ultrasound speckle can mask small details such as low contrast tumors or microcalcifications, which may be an early indication of breast cancer. This limitation prevents ultrasound from displacing mammography as the gold standard for breast cancer screening. Traditional speckle reduction techniques attempt to remove speckle noise while preserving edges and other important features but there is always a tradeoff between removing the speckle noise and blurring tissue structure and details. We introduce a novel speckle reduction and contrast enhancement method for ultrasound imaging that is motivated by the fundamental ideas behind compressive sampling. We also introduce a way to estimate instantaneous SNR in order to identify the areas that are mostly signal from the areas that are mostly noise in order to preserve the signal while suppressing the noise. We have shown improvements in SNR on the order of 12dB in the lab and improved visualization of clinical data.
Keywords :
biomedical ultrasonics; cancer; compressed sensing; image denoising; image enhancement; image resolution; image sampling; medical image processing; speckle; tumours; ultrasonic imaging; blurring tissue structure; breast cancer screening; breast imaging; coherent imaging techniques; compressive resampling; contrast enhancement method; contrast resolution; imaging technology; instantaneous SNR; interventional procedures; low contrast tumors; mammography; medical diagnostics; medical ultrasonography; medical ultrasound; microcalcifications; speckle noise; speckle reduction; subresolution scatterers; ultrasound imaging; ultrasound speckle; Breast; Image resolution; Imaging; Signal to noise ratio; Speckle; Ultrasonic imaging; breast cancer detection; compressive sampling; contrast enhancement; speckle reduction; ultrasound imaging;
Conference_Titel :
Signal Processing in Medicine and Biology Symposium (SPMB), 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Brooklyn, NY
DOI :
10.1109/SPMB.2013.6736769