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      Probe Oscillation Shear Elastography (PROSE): A High Frame-Rate Method for Two-Dimensional Ultrasound Shear Wave Elastography

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          Abstract

          Ultrasound shear wave elastography (SWE) utilizes the propagation of induced shear waves to characterize the shear modulus of soft tissue. Many methods rely on an acoustic radiation force (ARF) “push beam” to generate shear waves. However, specialized hardware is required to generate the push beams, and the thermal stress that is placed upon the ultrasound system, transducer, and tissue by the push beams currently limits the frame-rate to about 1 Hz. These constraints have limited the implementation of ARF to high-end clinical systems. This paper presents Probe Oscillation Shear Elastography (PROSE) as an alternative method to measure tissue elasticity. PROSE generates shear waves using a harmonic mechanical vibration of an ultrasound transducer, while simultaneously detecting motion with the same transducer under pulse-echo mode. Motion of the transducer during detection produces a “strain-like” compression artifact that is coupled with the observed shear waves. A novel symmetric sampling scheme is proposed such that pulse-echo detection events are acquired when the ultrasound transducer returns to the same physical position, allowing the shear waves to be decoupled from the compression artifact. Full field-of-view (FOV) two-dimensional (2D) shear wave speed images were obtained by applying a local frequency estimation (LFE) technique, capable of generating a 2D map from a single frame of shear wave motion. The shear wave imaging frame rate of PROSE is comparable to the vibration frequency, which can be an order of magnitude higher than ARF based techniques. PROSE was able to produce smooth and accurate shear wave images from three homogeneous phantoms with different moduli, with an effective frame rate of 300Hz. An inclusion phantom study showed that increased vibration frequencies improved the accuracy of inclusion imaging, and allowed targets as small as 6.5 mm to be resolved with good contrast (contrast-to-noise ratio ≥19 dB) between the target and background.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Role: Student Member, IEEE
          Role: Member, IEEE
          Role: Senior Member, IEEE
          Role: Life Fellow, IEEE
          Role: Member, IEEE
          Role: Member, IEEE
          Journal
          8310780
          20511
          IEEE Trans Med Imaging
          IEEE Trans Med Imaging
          IEEE transactions on medical imaging
          0278-0062
          1558-254X
          2 May 2017
          04 April 2016
          September 2016
          01 September 2017
          : 35
          : 9
          : 2098-2106
          Affiliations
          Mayo Graduate School and the Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
          Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
          Department of Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
          Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
          Department of Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
          Department of Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
          Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
          Author notes
          Article
          PMC5495143 PMC5495143 5495143 nihpa870388
          10.1109/TMI.2016.2550007
          5495143
          27076352
          0b1cb1cb-3c14-4034-9e28-8ec134c3eb44
          History
          Categories
          Article

          shear wave,ultrasound elastography,Mechanical vibration,inclusion

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