• DocumentCode
    790
  • Title

    Coherent Plane Wave Compounding for Very High Frame Rate Ultrasonography of Rapidly Moving Targets

  • Author

    Denarie, B. ; Tangen, T.A. ; Ekroll, Ingvild Kinn ; Rolim, N. ; Torp, Hans ; Bjastad, T. ; Lovstakken, Lasse

  • Author_Institution
    MI-Lab., Norwegian Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Trondheim, Norway
  • Volume
    32
  • Issue
    7
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Jul-13
  • Firstpage
    1265
  • Lastpage
    1276
  • Abstract
    Coherent plane wave compounding is a promising technique for achieving very high frame rate imaging without compromising image quality or penetration. However, this approach relies on the hypothesis that the imaged object is not moving during the compounded scan sequence, which is not the case in cardiovascular imaging. This work investigates the effect of tissue motion on retrospective transmit focusing in coherent compounded plane wave imaging (PWI). Two compound scan sequences were studied based on a linear and alternating sequence of tilted plane waves, with different timing characteristics. Simulation studies revealed potentially severe degradations in the retrospective focusing process, where both radial and lateral resolution was reduced, lateral shifts of the imaged medium were introduced, and losses in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) were inferred. For myocardial imaging, physiological tissue displacements were on the order of half a wavelength, leading to SNR losses up to 35 dB, and reductions of contrast by 40 dB. No significant difference was observed between the different tilt sequences. A motion compensation technique based on cross-correlation was introduced, which significantly recovered the losses in SNR and contrast for physiological tissue velocities. Worst case losses in SNR and contrast were recovered by 35 dB and 27-35 dB, respectively. The effects of motion were demonstrated in vivo when imaging a rat heart. Using PWI, very high frame rates up to 463 fps were achieved at high image quality, but a motion correction scheme was then required.
  • Keywords
    acoustic noise; biological tissues; biomedical ultrasonics; cardiology; image sequences; medical image processing; motion compensation; SNR; cardiovascular imaging; coherent compounded plane wave imaging; image quality; lateral resolution reduction; motion compensation technique; motion correction scheme; myocardial imaging; object image sequence; physiological tissue displacement; physiological tissue velocity; radial resolution reduction; rat heart; signal-to-noise ratio; tissue motion; ultrasonography; Apertures; Array signal processing; Image resolution; Imaging; Motion compensation; Signal to noise ratio; Transducers; Motion compensation; plane wave compounding; small animal applications; ultra-fast imaging; Algorithms; Animals; Computer Simulation; Echocardiography; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Movement; Phantoms, Imaging; Rats; Signal-To-Noise Ratio;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0062
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMI.2013.2255310
  • Filename
    6490061