Ultrafast Ultrasound Imaging


Book Description

This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue "Ultrafast Ultrasound Imaging" that was published in Applied Sciences







Diagnostic Ultrasound Imaging: Inside Out


Book Description

Diagnostic Ultrasound Imaging provides a unified description of the physical principles of ultrasound imaging, signal processing, systems and measurements. This comprehensive reference is a core resource for both graduate students and engineers in medical ultrasound research and design. With continuing rapid technological development of ultrasound in medical diagnosis, it is a critical subject for biomedical engineers, clinical and healthcare engineers and practitioners, medical physicists, and related professionals in the fields of signal and image processing. The book contains 17 new and updated chapters covering the fundamentals and latest advances in the area, and includes four appendices, 450 figures (60 available in color on the companion website), and almost 1,500 references. In addition to the continual influx of readers entering the field of ultrasound worldwide who need the broad grounding in the core technologies of ultrasound, this book provides those already working in these areas with clear and comprehensive expositions of these key new topics as well as introductions to state-of-the-art innovations in this field. Enables practicing engineers, students and clinical professionals to understand the essential physics and signal processing techniques behind modern imaging systems as well as introducing the latest developments that will shape medical ultrasound in the future Suitable for both newcomers and experienced readers, the practical, progressively organized applied approach is supported by hands-on MATLAB® code and worked examples that enable readers to understand the principles underlying diagnostic and therapeutic ultrasound Covers the new important developments in the use of medical ultrasound: elastography and high-intensity therapeutic ultrasound. Many new developments are comprehensively reviewed and explained, including aberration correction, acoustic measurements, acoustic radiation force imaging, alternate imaging architectures, bioeffects: diagnostic to therapeutic, Fourier transform imaging, multimode imaging, plane wave compounding, research platforms, synthetic aperture, vector Doppler, transient shear wave elastography, ultrafast imaging and Doppler, functional ultrasound and viscoelastic models







Ultrasound B-mode Imaging: Beamforming and Image Formation Techniques


Book Description

Ultrasound medical imaging stands out among the other diagnostic imaging modalities for its patient-friendliness, high temporal resolution, low cost, and absence of ionizing radiation. On the other hand, it may still suffer from limited detail level, low signal-to-noise ratio, and narrow field-of-view. In the last decade, new beamforming and image reconstruction techniques have emerged which aim at improving resolution, contrast, and clutter suppression, especially in difficult-to-image patients. Nevertheless, achieving a higher image quality is of the utmost importance in diagnostic ultrasound medical imaging, and further developments are still indispensable. From this point of view, a crucial role can be played by novel beamforming techniques as well as by non-conventional image formation techniques (e.g., advanced transmission strategies, and compounding, coded, and harmonic imaging). This Special Issue includes novel contributions on both ultrasound beamforming and image formation techniques, particularly addressed at improving B-mode image quality and related diagnostic content. This indeed represents a hot topic in the ultrasound imaging community, and further active research in this field is expected, where many challenges still persist.




Ultrasound Elastography for Biomedical Applications and Medicine


Book Description

Ultrasound Elastography for Biomedical Applications and Medicine Ivan Z. Nenadic, Matthew W. Urban, James F. Greenleaf, Mayo Clinic Ultrasound Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, USA Jean-Luc Gennisson, Miguel Bernal, Mickael Tanter, Institut Langevin – Ondes et Images, ESPCI ParisTech CNRS, France Covers all major developments and techniques of Ultrasound Elastography and biomedical applications The field of ultrasound elastography has developed various techniques with the potential to diagnose and track the progression of diseases such as breast and thyroid cancer, liver and kidney fibrosis, congestive heart failure, and atherosclerosis. Having emerged in the last decade, ultrasound elastography is a medical imaging modality that can noninvasively measure and map the elastic and viscous properties of soft tissues. Ultrasound Elastography for Biomedical Applications and Medicine covers the basic physics of ultrasound wave propagation and the interaction of ultrasound with various media. The book introduces tissue elastography, covers the history of the field, details the various methods that have been developed by research groups across the world, and describes its novel applications, particularly in shear wave elastography. Key features: Covers all major developments and techniques of ultrasound elastography and biomedical applications. Contributions from the pioneers of the field secure the most complete coverage of ultrasound elastography available. The book is essential reading for researchers and engineers working in ultrasound and elastography, as well as biomedical engineering students and those working in the field of biomechanics.




Ultrasound Elastography


Book Description

The comparison between methods, evaluation of portal hypertension and many other questions are still open issues in liver elastography. New elastographic applications are under evaluation and close to being used in clinical practice. Strain imaging has been incorporated into many disciplines and EFSUMB guidelines are under preparation. More research is necessary for improved evidence for clinical applications in daily practice. The Special Issue published papers on recent advances in development and application of Ultrasound Elastography.




Multimodality Imaging Innovations In Adult Congenital Heart Disease


Book Description

This book focuses on congenital heart disease (CHD) and emerging imaging technologies. It covers all clinically relevant aspects of the fascinating new cardiac imaging technologies, including a comprehensive explanation of their basic principles, practical aspects of novel clinical applications, and detailed descriptions of specific uses in the broad spectrum of clinically important adult CHD. Innovations and emerging technologies for diagnosis and therapeutics, evaluation and treatment are continually evolving, and due to these advances in non-invasive diagnosis, there has been a significant improvement in the survival rates for CHD patient. Novel approaches to trans-catheter interventions and advances in echocardiography, MRI and CT imaging are being developed and incorporated into routine clinical practice, while emerging three-dimensional printing technologies are fundamentally affecting patient care, research, trainee education, and interactions between multidisciplinary teams, patients, and caregivers. In addition, translational technologies on the horizon promise to take this nascent field even further. Exploring the applicability of these emerging technologies in improving our understanding of complex congenital cardiac defect anatomy and physiology will provide new treatment options for this unique population. Written by experts in the field who are also involved in patient care, this book discusses the practical application of innovations in advanced multimodality imaging in the daily clinical routine and offers tips and tricks for beginners.




Sonomyography


Book Description

This book explains the exciting field of sonomyography (SMG), which makes it possible to use continuous signals detected by ultrasound images in real time to evaluate muscle functions. After an introduction, the book discusses the methods to extract and analyse different SMG signals, including muscle thickness, penetration angle, fascicle length, contraction activity, and muscle cross-sectional areas, etc. It then describes the mono-modal applications of sonomyography: posture recognition, prosthesis control, muscle training, muscle strength (fall risk assessment), fatigue assessment, and the assessment of dysfunctional muscles. The book also shows how to combine sonomyography with additional muscle assessment methods, in particular EMG, MMG, and motion sensors. Lastly, it provides an overview of the potential applications in sport science, rehabilitation, fitness, and elderly health.




Ultrafast Ultrasound Imaging for Simultaneous Extraction of Flow and Arterial Wall Motion with Linear Array Probe


Book Description

This thesis is focused on biomedical engineering for clinical applications. The main goal of this work is to provide to clinicians an ultrasound mode to simultaneously extract wall motion and flow at high frame rates in arteries. Cardiovascular pathologies are a major cause of death and disability worldwide. Although the formation of such diseases is still not fully understood, it appears that some pathological markers from both wall and flow could allow an earlier detection. Because tissues are subject to fast and complex phenomena in the arteries, a high frame rate imaging modality seems highly relevant to extract as much information as possible on the condition of the cardiovascular system. Unfortunately, no technique is currently clinically used or even approved for the extraction of both flow and wall pathological markers at high frame rates. Therefore, in this thesis, I propose to design an ultrasound sequence and algorithm permitting to extract both aspects, at high frame rates on arteries, for a potential clinical application. There are three main scientific contributions in this thesis: i) the design of the ultrasound sequence with a 2D motion estimator, ii) a new adaptive clutter filtering approach, and iii) a clinical trial. The ultrasound sequence is based on plane wave acquisition permitting to yield frame rates up to 10 000 Hz in the carotid. The pipeline used an approach introducing a virtual lateral oscillation in ultrasound images which, coupled with a 2D phase-based estimator based on previous works from the literature, allows to extract vectorial velocity fields. Validations for both flow and wall motion estimation were performed on a commercial Doppler flow phantom and an in-house realistic carotid phantom was designed for the experiments. An adaptive clutter filtering technique was also developed and validated on volunteers based on tissue estimates, which permit to precisely remove tissue clutter from flow signals. Finally, the clinical trial was performed at the hospital with a group of volunteers and a group of patients. The ultrasound sequence, motion estimation algorithm, and adaptive clutter filtering approaches were well validated in the thesis. The method can provide both wall motion and flow estimates at high frame rates, with low errors and standard deviations. The adaptive clutter filtering approach permits to better extract the flow compared to other standard approaches. This improvement is especially noticeable close to the wall, which would allow accurate flow and stress measurements along arterial walls where plaques can form and develop. To conclude, the clinical trial has demonstrated the feasibility in a clinical environment with the extraction of wall motion, flow, and arterial parameters that showed differences between and within groups. This thesis is then a step toward clinical use of high frame rate ultrasound imaging for quantification of both wall motion and flow for pathological detection of cardiovascular diseases.