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Normal and shear strain imaging using 2D deformation tracking on beam steered linear array datasets
Author(s) -
Xu Haiyan,
Varghese Tomy
Publication year - 2013
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 - 10.1118/1.4770272
Subject(s) - parallelogram , optics , beam (structure) , transducer , acoustics , imaging phantom , displacement (psychology) , physics , perpendicular , geometry , mathematics , psychology , hinge , classical mechanics , psychotherapist
Purpose: Previous publications have reported on the use of one‐dimensional cross‐correlation analysis with beam‐steered echo signals. However, this approach fails to accurately track displacements at larger depths (>4.5 cm) due to lower signal‐to‐noise. In this paper, the authors present the use of adaptive parallelogram shaped two‐dimensional processing blocks for deformation tracking.Methods: Beam‐steered datasets were acquired using a VFX 9L4 linear array transducer operated at a 6 MHz center frequency for steered angles from −15 to 15° in increments of 1°, on both uniformly elastic and single‐inclusion tissue‐mimicking phantoms. Echo signals were acquired to a depth of 65 mm with the focus set at 40 mm corresponding to the center of phantom. Estimated angular displacements along and perpendicular to the beam direction are used to compute axial and lateral displacement vectors using a least‐squares approach. Normal and shear strain tensor component are then estimated based on these displacement vectors.Results: Their results demonstrate that parallelogram shaped two‐dimensional deformation tracking significantly improves spatial resolution (factor of 7.79 along the beam direction), signal‐to‐noise (5 dB improvement), and contrast‐to‐noise (8–14 dB improvement) associated with strain imaging using beam steering on linear array transducers.Conclusions: Parallelogram shaped two‐dimensional deformation tracking is demonstrated in beam‐steered radiofrequency data, enabling its use in the estimation of normal and shear strain components.