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Radio‐frequency ablation electrode displacement elastography: A phantom study
Author(s) -
Bharat Shyam,
Varghese Tomy,
Madsen Ernest L.,
Zagzebski James A.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.2919763
Subject(s) - imaging phantom , elastography , materials science , displacement (psychology) , biomedical engineering , radio frequency , ablation , electrode , isotropy , acoustics , signal to noise ratio (imaging) , noise (video) , ultrasound , optics , physics , computer science , medicine , telecommunications , artificial intelligence , psychology , quantum mechanics , image (mathematics) , psychotherapist
This article describes the evaluation of a novel method of tissue displacement for use in the elastographic visualization of radio‐frequency (rf) ablation‐induced lesions. The method involves use of the radio‐frequency ablation electrode as a displacement device, which provides localized compression in the region of interest. This displacement mechanism offers the advantage of easy in vivo implementation since problems such as excessive lateral and elevational displacements present when using external compression are reduced with this approach. The method was tested on a single‐inclusion tissue‐mimicking phantom containing a radio‐frequency ablation electrode rigidly attached to the inclusion center. Full‐frame rf echo signals were acquired from the phantom before and after electrode displacements ranging from 0.05 to 0.2 mm. One‐dimensional cross‐correlation analysis between pre‐and postcompression signals was used to measure tissue displacements, and strains were determined by computing the gradient of the displacement. The strain contrast, contrast‐to‐noise ratio, and signal‐to‐noise ratio were estimated from the resulting strain images. Comparisons are drawn between the elastographically measured dimensions and those known a priori for the single‐inclusion phantom. Electrode displacement elastography was found to slightly underestimate the inclusion dimensions. The method was also tested on a second tissue‐mimicking phantom and on in vitro rf‐ablated lesions in canine liver tissue. The results validate previous in vivo findings that electrode displacement elastography is an effective method for monitoring rf ablation.