Title :
In-vivo convex array vector flow imaging
Author :
Jensen, John A. ; Brandt, Andreas Hjelm ; Nielsen, Michael Bachmann
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Tech. Univ. of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark
Abstract :
In-vivo VFI scans obtained from the abdomen of a human volunteer using a convex array transducers and transverse oscillation vector flow imaging (VFI) are presented. A 3 MHz BK Medical 8820e (Herlev, Denmark) 192-element convex array probe is used with the SARUS experimental ultrasound scanner. A sequence with a 129-line B-mode image is followed by a VFI sequence in 17 directions with 32 emissions in each direction. The pulse repetition frequency was set to 5 kHz, and the intensity and MI were measured with the Acoustic Intensity Measurement System AIMS III (Onda, Sunnyvale, California, USA). The derated Ispta.3 was 79.7 mW/m2 and MI was 1.32, which are within FDA limits for abdominal scans. The right liver lobe of a 28-year healthy volunteer was scanned with a view of the main portal vein and vena cava inferior at a frame rate of 7.4 Hz. Thirty frames were acquired, giving 4 seconds of data. For this volunteer the duration corresponded to roughly 3 heartbeats. The velocities were found at a beam-to-flow angle of 72 ± 21°, where a conventional CFM scan would yield poor results. Three VF images from the same position in the cardiac cycle were investigated and the mean lateral velocities were -0.079, -0.081 and -0.080 m/s showing the consistence of the in-vivo results.
Keywords :
acoustic emission; acoustic intensity measurement; biomedical transducers; biomedical ultrasonics; blood vessels; cardiology; image sequences; liver; medical image processing; ultrasonic imaging; ultrasonic transducer arrays; ultrasonic velocity; 129-line B-mode image sequence; BK Medical 8820e 192-element convex array probe; SARUS experimental ultrasound scanner; abdominal scans; acoustic intensity measurement system AIMS III; beam-to-flow angle; cardiac cycle; convex array transducers; frame rate; frequency 3 MHz; frequency 5 kHz; heartbeats; human volunteer abdomen; in-vivo convex array vector flow imaging; lateral velocity; portal vein; pulse repetition frequency; right liver lobe; transverse oscillation vector flow imaging; vena cava inferior; Arrays; Imaging; Oscillators; Portals; Transducers; Vectors; Veins;
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium (IUS), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2014.0082