Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia, MR5 415 Lane Rd, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA.
Phys Med Biol. 2012 Aug 21;57(16):5275-93. doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/57/16/5275. Epub 2012 Aug 1.
Ultrasound-based real-time molecular imaging in large blood vessels holds promise for early detection and diagnosis of various important and significant diseases, such as stroke, atherosclerosis, and cancer. Central to the success of this imaging technique is the isolation of ligand-receptor bound adherent microbubbles from free microbubbles and tissue structures. In this paper, we present a new approach, termed singular spectrum-based targeted molecular (SiSTM) imaging, which separates signal components using singular value spectra content over local regions of complex echo data. Simulations were performed to illustrate the effects of acoustic target motion and harmonic energy on SiSTM imaging-derived measurements of statistical dimensionality. In vitro flow phantom experiments were performed under physiologically realistic conditions (2.7 cm s⁻¹ flow velocity and 4 mm diameter) with targeted and non-targeted phantom channels. Both simulation and experimental results demonstrated that the relative motion and harmonic characteristics of adherent microbubbles (i.e. low motion and large harmonics) yields echo data with a dimensionality that is distinct from free microbubbles (i.e. large motion and large harmonics) and tissue (i.e. low motion and low harmonics). Experimental SiSTM images produced the expected trend of a greater adherent microbubble signal in targeted versus non-targeted microbubble experiments (P < 0.05, n = 4). The location of adherent microbubbles was qualitatively confirmed via optical imaging of the fluorescent DiI signal along the phantom channel walls after SiSTM imaging. In comparison with two frequency-based real-time molecular imaging strategies, SiSTM imaging provided significantly higher image contrast (P < 0.001, n = 4) and a larger area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (P < 0.05, n = 4).
基于超声的实时分子成像在大动脉中具有早期检测和诊断各种重要疾病的潜力,如中风、动脉粥样硬化和癌症。这种成像技术的成功关键在于从游离微泡和组织结构中分离配体-受体结合的贴壁微泡。在本文中,我们提出了一种新的方法,称为基于奇异谱的靶向分子(SiSTM)成像,它使用奇异值谱内容来分离局部区域的复杂回波数据中的信号分量。进行了模拟以说明声靶运动和谐能量对 SiSTM 成像衍生测量统计维度的影响。在具有靶向和非靶向幻影通道的生理现实条件(2.7 cm s⁻¹流速和 4 mm 直径)下进行了体外流动幻影实验。模拟和实验结果均表明,贴壁微泡的相对运动和谐波特性(即低运动和大谐波)产生的回波数据与游离微泡(即大运动和大谐波)和组织(即低运动和低谐波)的维度不同。实验 SiSTM 图像产生了预期的趋势,即靶向与非靶向微泡实验中的贴壁微泡信号更大(P < 0.05,n = 4)。通过 SiSTM 成像后沿幻影通道壁对荧光 DiI 信号进行光学成像,定性地确认了贴壁微泡的位置。与两种基于频率的实时分子成像策略相比,SiSTM 成像提供了显著更高的图像对比度(P < 0.001,n = 4)和更大的接收器操作特征曲线下面积(P < 0.05,n = 4)。