• DocumentCode
    70510
  • Title

    In Vivo Ultrasound Thermography in Presence of Temperature Heterogeneity and Natural Motions

  • Author

    Bayat, Mahdi ; Ballard, John Robert ; Ebbini, Emad S.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
  • Volume
    62
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Feb. 2015
  • Firstpage
    450
  • Lastpage
    457
  • Abstract
    Real-time ultrasound thermography has been recently demonstrated on commercially available diagnostic imaging probes. In vitro experimental results demonstrate high sensitivity to small, localized temperature changes induced by subtherapeutic focused ultrasound. Most of the published results, however, are based on a thermally induced echo strain model that assumes infinitesimal change in temperature between imaging frames. Under this assumption, the echo strain is computed using a low-pass axial differentiator, which is implemented by a finite-impulse response digital filter. In this paper, we introduce a new model for temperature estimation, which employs a recursive axial filter that acts as a spatial differentiator-integrator of echo shifts. The filter is derived from first principles and it accounts for a nonuniform temperature baseline, when computing the spatial temperature change between two frames. This is a major difference from the previously proposed infinitesimal echo strain filter (δ-ESF) approach. We show that the new approach can be implemented by a first-order infinite-impulse response digital filter with depth-dependent spatial frequency response. Experimental results in vitro demonstrate the advantages over the δ-ESF approach in terms of suppressing the spatial variations in the estimated temperature without resorting to ad hoc low-pass filtering of echo strains. The performance of the new recursive echo strain filter (RESF) is also illustrated using echo data obtained during subtherapeutic localized heating in the hind limb of Copenhagen rat in vivo. In addition to the RESF, we have used an adaptive spatial filter to remove motion and deformation artifacts during real-time data collection. The adaptive filtering algorithm is described and comparisons with uncompensated estimated spatio-temporal temperature profiles are given. The results demonstrate the feasibility of in vivo ultrasound thermography with high sensitivity and speci- icity.
  • Keywords
    IIR filters; adaptive filters; biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; biothermics; data acquisition; infrared imaging; low-pass filters; medical image processing; motion compensation; recursive filters; spatiotemporal phenomena; ultrasonic imaging; δ-ESF approach; Copenhagen rat; adaptive spatial filter; commercially available diagnostic imaging probes; deformation artifacts; depth-dependent spatial frequency response; echo shifts; finite-impulse response digital filter; finitesimal change; first-order infinite-impulse response digital filter; hind limb; in vivo ultrasound thermography; infinitesimal echo strain filter; low-pass axial differentiator; motion removal; natural motions; nonuniform temperature baseline; real-time data collection; real-time ultrasound thermography; recursive axial filter; recursive echo strain filter; small localized temperature changes; spatial differentiator-integrator; subtherapeutic focused ultrasound; subtherapeutic localized heating; temperature estimation; temperature heterogeneity; thermally induced echo strain model; uncompensated estimated spatio-temporal temperature profiles; Heating; In vivo; Mathematical model; Strain; Temperature distribution; Thermal expansion; Wires; Adaptive motion compensation; speckle tracking; ultrasound thermography;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBME.2014.2358075
  • Filename
    6898873