Gupta Shreyank, Haiat Guillaume, Laporte Catherine, Belanger Pierre
IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control. 2021 May;68(5):1653-1663. doi: 10.1109/TUFFC.2020.3043893. Epub 2021 Apr 26.
The transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasound is a method that uses a handheld low-frequency (2-2.5 MHz), pulsed Doppler phased array probe to measure blood velocity within the arteries located inside the brain. The problem with TCD lies in the low ultrasonic energy penetrating inside the brain through the skull, which leads to a low signal-to-noise ratio. This is due to several effects, including phase aberration, variations in the speed of sound in the skull, scattering, the acoustic impedance mismatch, and absorption of the three-layer medium constituted by soft tissues, the skull, and the brain. The goal of this article is to study the effect of transmission losses due to the acoustic impedance mismatch on the transmitted energies as a function of frequency. To do so, wave propagation was modeled from the ultrasonic transducer into the brain. This model calculates transmission coefficients inside the brain, leading to a frequency-dependent transmission coefficient for a given skin and bone thickness. This approach was validated experimentally by comparing the analytical results with measurements obtained from a bone phantom plate mimicking the skull. The average position error of the occurrence of the maximum amplitude between the experiment and analytical result was equivalent to a 0.06-mm error on the skin thickness given a fixed bone thickness. The similarity between the experimental and analytical results was also demonstrated by calculating correlation coefficients. The average correlation between the experimental and analytical results came out to be 0.50 for a high-frequency probe and 0.78 for a low-frequency probe. Further analysis of the simulation showed that an optimized excitation frequency can be chosen based on skin and bone thicknesses, thereby offering an opportunity to improve the image quality of TCD.
经颅多普勒(TCD)超声是一种使用手持式低频(2 - 2.5兆赫兹)脉冲多普勒相控阵探头来测量脑内动脉血速的方法。TCD的问题在于超声能量透过颅骨进入脑内的能力较低,这导致信噪比很低。这是由多种效应引起的,包括相位畸变、颅骨中声速的变化、散射、声阻抗失配以及由软组织、颅骨和脑构成的三层介质的吸收。本文的目的是研究作为频率函数的声阻抗失配对传输能量的传输损耗的影响。为此,对从超声换能器到脑内的波传播进行了建模。该模型计算脑内的传输系数,从而得出给定皮肤和骨骼厚度下与频率相关的传输系数。通过将分析结果与从模拟颅骨的骨仿体板获得的测量值进行比较,对该方法进行了实验验证。在给定固定骨骼厚度的情况下,实验与分析结果之间最大振幅出现位置的平均误差相当于皮肤厚度上0.06毫米的误差。通过计算相关系数也证明了实验结果与分析结果之间的相似性。高频探头的实验与分析结果之间的平均相关性为0.50,低频探头为0.78。对模拟的进一步分析表明,可以根据皮肤和骨骼厚度选择优化的激发频率,从而提供改善TCD图像质量的机会。