DocumentCode
338226
Title
Correlation analysis of received echoes from contrast agents in-vitro and in-vivo
Author
Chomas, J.E. ; Sikes, R.A. ; Ferrara, Katherine W.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Virginia Univ., Charlottesville, VA, USA
Volume
2
fYear
1998
fDate
1998
Firstpage
1803
Abstract
Ultrasound contrast agents can be used to receive signals from vessels significantly smaller than the effective resolution of an ultrasound system. The signal from these microbubbles is coherent across pulses as long as the microbubble is intact, looking like a moving reflector that is more echogenic than blood cells and shifted in spectral mean. When the microbubble is destroyed, the received signal decorrelates between pulses. In-vitro optical and acoustical experiments observing single bubble echoes were conducted. Three mechanisms of destruction were observed optically: static diffusion, pressure-driven diffusion, and fragmentation. Fragmentation was often observed at pressures above 1.4 MPa, while static diffusion and acoustical diffusion were most frequently responsible for bubble destruction at low transmitted pressure. Correlation analysis between echoes received from the same bubble provided analytical evidence of bubble destruction; moreover, a detection scheme based on decorrelation was designed and tested
Keywords
acoustic correlation; biomedical ultrasonics; bubbles; diffusion; echo; 1.4 MPa; acoustical diffusion; blood cells; bubble destruction; contrast agents; correlation analysis; decorrelation; fragmentation; in-vitro; in-vivo; medical US; medical diagnostic imaging; microbubbles; moving reflector; pressure-driven diffusion; received echoes; spectral mean; static diffusion; ultrasound system effective resolution; vessels; Acoustic pulses; Acoustic signal detection; Acoustic testing; Blood; Cells (biology); Decorrelation; In vitro; Optical pulses; Signal resolution; Ultrasonic imaging;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Ultrasonics Symposium, 1998. Proceedings., 1998 IEEE
Conference_Location
Sendai
ISSN
1051-0117
Print_ISBN
0-7803-4095-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ULTSYM.1998.765300
Filename
765300
Link To Document