Title :
Displacement and strain imaging of coronary arteries with intraluminal ultrasound
Author :
Shapo, Benjamin M. ; Crowe, John R. ; Skovoroda, Andrei R. ; Eberle, Mike J. ; Cohn, Nabi Abraham ; O´Donnell, Matthew
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
fDate :
3/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Tissue elasticity can be estimated from displacement and strain images acquired under controlled deformation. We extend this approach for coronary arteries, deformed and imaged by an integrated angioplasty balloon and ultrasonic imaging probe. Because the lumen cross section of a severely occluded artery is not circular, we have also developed a technique to perform all motion computations in the reference frame of the lumen´s geometric center. This coordinate system is independent of the imaging catheter and consequently referencing to this frame removes artifacts associated with probe motion within the balloon during deformation. Displacements and strains estimated by phase-sensitive correlation-based speckle tracking were used to distinguish arterial plaques in simulated coronary arteries of differing elastic moduli: hard, soft, and homogenous. We have also applied these methods to images of a homogeneous gelatin phantom collected with the integrated probe. The maximum phantom displacement was about 40 pm, and the maximum radial normal strain was about 4% (absolute value). The spatial dependence of these quantities shows good agreement with theoretically predicted values.
Keywords :
acoustic correlation; biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; elastic moduli; medical signal processing; speckle; 40 mum; 50 MHz; arterial plaques; balloon; controlled deformation; coordinate system; coronary arteries; displacement imaging; elastic moduli; geometric center; homogeneous gelatin phantom; imaging catheter; integrated angioplasty balloon; intraluminal ultrasound; lumen cross section; maximum phantom displacement; motion computations; phase-sensitive correlation-based speckle tracking; probe motion; reference frame; severely occluded artery; strain imaging; tissue elasticity; ultrasonic imaging probe; Angioplasty; Arteries; Capacitive sensors; Catheters; Displacement control; Elasticity; Imaging phantoms; Probes; Strain control; Ultrasonic imaging;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on