Ray theory-based compounded plane wave ultrasound imaging for aberration corrected transcranial imaging: Comparison between phantom experiments and simulations
Jiang Chen
1
,
Boyi Li
2
,
Lijun Xie
2
,
Chengcheng Liu
2, 3
,
Kailiang Xu
3, 4
,
Yiqiang Zhan
1
,
Dean Ta
3, 4
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2023-12-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 1.049
CiteScore: 7.9
Impact factor: 4.1
ISSN: 0041624X, 18749968
PubMed ID:
37541030
Acoustics and Ultrasonics
Abstract
Compounded plane wave imaging (CPWI) allows high-frame-rate measurement and has been one of the most promising modalities for real-time brain imaging. However, ultrasonic brain imaging using the CPWI modality is usually performed with a worn thin or removal of the skull layer. Otherwise, the skull layer is expected to distort the ultrasonic wavefronts and significantly decrease intracranial imaging quality. The motivation of this study is to investigate a CPWI method for transcranial brain imaging with the skull layer. A coordinate transformation ray-tracing (CTRT) approach was proposed to track the distorted ultrasonic wavefronts and calculate the time delays for the ultrasound plane wave passing through the skull layer. With an accurate correction for the time delays in beamforming, the CTRT-based CPWI could achieve high-quality intracranial images with the presence of skulls. The proposed CTRT-based CPWI method was verified using a simplified three-layer transcranial model. The full-wave simulation demonstrated that CTRT could accurately (i.e., relative percentage error less than0.18%) track the distorted transmitting wavefront through skull. Compared with the CPWI without aberration correction, the CTRT-based CPWI provided high-quality intracranial imaging and could accurately localize intracranial point scatterers; specifically, positioning error decreases from 0.5 mm to 0.1 mm on average in the axial direction and from 0.7 mm to 0.1 mm on average in the lateral direction. As the compounded angles increased in the CTRT-based CPWI, the contrast improved by 16.2 dB on average for the region of interest, and the array performance indicator (representing resolution) decreased by 4.0 on average for the intracranial point scatterers. The CTRT is of low computational cost compared with full wave simulation. This study suggested that the proposed CTRT-based CPWI might have the potential for real-time and non-invasive transcranial aberration-corrected imaging.
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15
Total citations:
15
Citations from 2024:
13
(86.67%)
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GOST
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Chen J. et al. Ray theory-based compounded plane wave ultrasound imaging for aberration corrected transcranial imaging: Comparison between phantom experiments and simulations // Ultrasonics. 2023. Vol. 135. p. 107124.
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Chen J., Li B., Xie L., Liu C., Xu K., Zhan Y., Ta D. Ray theory-based compounded plane wave ultrasound imaging for aberration corrected transcranial imaging: Comparison between phantom experiments and simulations // Ultrasonics. 2023. Vol. 135. p. 107124.
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RIS
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.ultras.2023.107124
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultras.2023.107124
TI - Ray theory-based compounded plane wave ultrasound imaging for aberration corrected transcranial imaging: Comparison between phantom experiments and simulations
T2 - Ultrasonics
AU - Chen, Jiang
AU - Li, Boyi
AU - Xie, Lijun
AU - Liu, Chengcheng
AU - Xu, Kailiang
AU - Zhan, Yiqiang
AU - Ta, Dean
PY - 2023
DA - 2023/12/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 107124
VL - 135
PMID - 37541030
SN - 0041-624X
SN - 1874-9968
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{2023_Chen,
author = {Jiang Chen and Boyi Li and Lijun Xie and Chengcheng Liu and Kailiang Xu and Yiqiang Zhan and Dean Ta},
title = {Ray theory-based compounded plane wave ultrasound imaging for aberration corrected transcranial imaging: Comparison between phantom experiments and simulations},
journal = {Ultrasonics},
year = {2023},
volume = {135},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {dec},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultras.2023.107124},
pages = {107124},
doi = {10.1016/j.ultras.2023.107124}
}