• DocumentCode
    16929
  • Title

    Finding the peak velocity in a flow from its doppler spectrum

  • Author

    Vilkomerson, D. ; Ricci, Stefano ; Tortoli, Piero

  • Author_Institution
    DVX LLC, Princeton, NJ, USA
  • Volume
    60
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Oct. 2013
  • Firstpage
    2079
  • Lastpage
    2088
  • Abstract
    The signal backscattered by blood cells crossing a sample volume produces a Doppler power spectrum determined by the scatterers´ velocity distribution. Because of intrinsic spectral broadening, the peak Doppler frequency observed does not correspond to the peak velocity in the flow. Several methods have been proposed for estimating the maximum velocity component-an important clinical parameter-but these methods are approximate, based on heuristic thresholds that can be inaccurate and strongly affected by noise. Reported here is a method of modeling the Doppler power spectrum of a flow, and from that model, determining what Doppler frequency on the descending slope of the power spectrum corresponds to the peak velocity in the insonated flow. It is shown that, for a fully insonated flow with a parabolic velocity distribution, the peak velocity corresponds to the Doppler frequency at the half-power point on that slope. The method is demonstrated to be robust with regard to the effects of noise and valid for a wide range of acquisition parameters. Experimental maximum velocity measurements on steady flows with rates between 100 and 300 mL/min (peak velocity range 6.6 cm/s to 19.9 cm/s) show a mean bias error that is smaller than 1%.
  • Keywords
    Doppler measurement; biomedical ultrasonics; blood; cellular biophysics; haemodynamics; Doppler frequency; Doppler power spectrum; blood cells; insonated flow; intrinsic spectral broadening; parabolic velocity distribution; peak velocity; sample volume; scatterer velocity distribution; signal backscattering; Apertures; Blood; Cells (biology); Doppler effect; Mathematical model; Noise; Transducers; Blood Flow Velocity; Computer Simulation; Models, Cardiovascular; Phantoms, Imaging; Regional Blood Flow; Ultrasonography, Doppler;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0885-3010
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TUFFC.2013.2798
  • Filename
    6604539