DocumentCode :
37838
Title :
3-D ultrafast doppler imaging applied to the noninvasive mapping of blood vessels in Vivo
Author :
Provost, Jean ; Papadacci, Clement ; Demene, Charlie ; Gennisson, Jean-Luc ; Tanter, Mickael ; Pernot, Mathieu
Author_Institution :
Inst. Langevin, Paris Sci. et Lettres Res. Univ., Paris, France
Volume :
62
Issue :
8
fYear :
2015
fDate :
Aug-15
Firstpage :
1467
Lastpage :
1472
Abstract :
Ultrafast Doppler imaging was introduced as a technique to quantify blood flow in an entire 2-D field of view, expanding the field of application of ultrasound imaging to the highly sensitive anatomical and functional mapping of blood vessels. We have recently developed 3-D ultrafast ultrasound imaging, a technique that can produce thousands of ultrasound volumes per second, based on a 3-D plane and diverging wave emissions, and demonstrated its clinical feasibility in human subjects in vivo. In this study, we show that noninvasive 3-D ultrafast power Doppler, pulsed Doppler, and color Doppler imaging can be used to perform imaging of blood vessels in humans when using coherent compounding of 3-D tilted plane waves. A customized, programmable, 1024-channel ultrasound system was designed to perform 3-D ultrafast imaging. Using a 32 × 32, 3-MHz matrix phased array (Vermon, Tours, France), volumes were beamformed by coherently compounding successive tilted plane wave emissions. Doppler processing was then applied in a voxel-wise fashion. The proof of principle of 3-D ultrafast power Doppler imaging was first performed by imaging Tygon tubes of various diameters, and in vivo feasibility was demonstrated by imaging small vessels in the human thyroid. Simultaneous 3-D color and pulsed Doppler imaging using compounded emissions were also applied in the carotid artery and the jugular vein in one healthy volunteer.
Keywords :
Doppler effect; array signal processing; biological organs; biomedical equipment; biomedical ultrasonics; blood vessels; haemodynamics; medical image processing; 1024-channel ultrasound system design; 2D blood flow quantification; 3D color Doppler imaging; 3D plane; 3D pulsed Doppler imaging; 3D ultrafast Doppler imaging application; 3D ultrafast ultrasound imaging; Tygon tube diameter variation; Tygon tube imaging; beamforming; carotid artery; clinical feasibility; coherent 3D tilted plane wave compounding; coherent tilted plane wave emission compounding; customized ultrasound system; diverging wave emission; frequency 3 MHz; highly sensitive anatomical blood vessel mapping; highly sensitive functional blood vessel mapping; in vivo human blood vessel imaging; in vivo human thyroid small vessel imaging; in vivo noninvasive blood vessel mapping; jugular vein; matrix phased array; noninvasive 3D ultrafast power Doppler imaging; programmable ultrasound system; ultrasound imaging application; ultrasound volume production; voxel-wise Doppler processing; Biomedical imaging; Blood; Doppler effect; Image resolution; In vivo; Ultrasonic imaging;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-3010
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2015.007032
Filename :
7185013
Link To Document :
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