Khairalseed Mawia, Xiong Fangyuan, Kim Jung-Whan, Mattrey Robert F, Parker Kevin J, Hoyt Kenneth
Department of Bioengineering, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas, USA; Department of Biomedical Engineering, Sudan University of Science and Technology, Khartoum, Sudan.
Department of Bioengineering, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas, USA; Department of Medical Ultrasound, Tongji Hospital of the Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China.
Ultrasound Med Biol. 2018 Jan;44(1):267-277. doi: 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2017.09.003. Epub 2017 Oct 12.
H-Scan is a new ultrasound imaging technique that relies on matching a model of pulse-echo formation to the mathematics of a class of Gaussian-weighted Hermite polynomials. This technique may be beneficial in the measurement of relative scatterer sizes and in cancer therapy, particularly for early response to drug treatment. Because current H-scan techniques use focused ultrasound data acquisitions, spatial resolution degrades away from the focal region and inherently affects relative scatterer size estimation. Although the resolution of ultrasound plane wave imaging can be inferior to that of traditional focused ultrasound approaches, the former exhibits a homogeneous spatial resolution throughout the image plane. The purpose of this study was to implement H-scan using plane wave imaging and investigate the impact of spatial angular compounding on H-scan image quality. Parallel convolution filters using two different Gaussian-weighted Hermite polynomials that describe ultrasound scattering events are applied to the radiofrequency data. The H-scan processing is done on each radiofrequency image plane before averaging to get the angular compounded image. The relative strength from each convolution is color-coded to represent relative scatterer size. Given results from a series of phantom materials, H-scan imaging with spatial angular compounding more accurately reflects the true scatterer size caused by reductions in the system point spread function and improved signal-to-noise ratio. Preliminary in vivo H-scan imaging of tumor-bearing animals suggests this modality may be useful for monitoring early response to chemotherapeutic treatment. Overall, H-scan imaging using ultrasound plane waves and spatial angular compounding is a promising approach for visualizing the relative size and distribution of acoustic scattering sources.
H扫描是一种新的超声成像技术,它依靠将脉冲回波形成模型与一类高斯加权埃尔米特多项式的数学方法相匹配。该技术在相对散射体大小测量和癌症治疗中可能有益,特别是对于药物治疗的早期反应。由于当前的H扫描技术使用聚焦超声数据采集,空间分辨率在远离焦点区域时会下降,并且会固有地影响相对散射体大小估计。尽管超声平面波成像的分辨率可能低于传统聚焦超声方法,但前者在整个图像平面上具有均匀的空间分辨率。本研究的目的是使用平面波成像实现H扫描,并研究空间角度复合对H扫描图像质量的影响。将使用描述超声散射事件的两种不同高斯加权埃尔米特多项式的并行卷积滤波器应用于射频数据。在平均以获得角度复合图像之前,在每个射频图像平面上进行H扫描处理。每个卷积的相对强度用颜色编码以表示相对散射体大小。根据一系列体模材料的结果,具有空间角度复合的H扫描成像通过降低系统点扩散函数和提高信噪比,更准确地反映了真实散射体大小。对荷瘤动物的初步体内H扫描成像表明,这种方式可能有助于监测化疗治疗的早期反应。总体而言,使用超声平面波和空间角度复合的H扫描成像是一种用于可视化声散射源相对大小和分布的有前途的方法。