-
Reports in Medical Imaging
-
About Dovepress
Open access peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals.
-
Open Access
Dove Medical Press is now a member of the Open Access Initiative
-
An Author's Guide
A guide to help authors get their paper published.
-
Advocacy
Support Open Access and Dove Press
-
Reprints
Promotional Article Monitoring - further details
-
Favored Author Program
Real benefits for authors, including fast-track processing of papers.
Effective ultrasonic virtual sources which can be positioned independently of physical aperture focus positions
Original Research
(1599) Views (324) Full article downloads
Authors: Chikayoshi Sumi, Shinya Uga
Published Date September 2010
Volume 2010:3 Pages 45 - 59
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/RMI.S12801
Chikayoshi Sumi, Shinya UgaDepartment of Information and Communication Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, Sophia University, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract: In this report, newly obtained ultrasonic virtual sources, VS1 and VS2, are described. That is, both virtual sources are obtained on the basis of the new viewpoint that the position of a virtual source can also be obtained regardless of the focus position of any physical aperture. VS1 is a virtual source that is a point acoustic source model set behind physical array elements and enables an increase in the transmitted ultrasound intensity using plural transmission ultrasound elements, and increases the size of the region of interest, that is, the same virtual source as that reported solo by other groups previously. As is well known, VS1 increases the echo signal-to-noise ratio; this yields a tissue displacement/strain measurement as well as B-mode imaging, and enables associated applications, eg, shear modulus reconstruction. Alternatively, VS2 uses an arbitrary position ahead of the physical array elements as a virtual source position with a synthetic aperture method. With VS2, random scattering media (material) such as point acoustic sources can be used as virtual sources. Preliminary experimental results are presented for a lateral modulation method. In the experiments described here using an ultrasound linear array type transducer (ultrasound element pitch, 0.2 mm; ultrasound frequency, 7.5 MHz), it was possible to use a depth range of ± 3 mm for virtual source positions. Remarkably, VS2 yielded higher lateral resolutions than the physical sources. That is, VS2 mitigates the physical and electrical limitations for using smaller ultrasound array elements and a smaller pitch, such that both a high lateral resolution and a high echo signal-to-noise ratio are obtained.
Keywords: ultrasound, virtual source, lateral modulation, synthetic aperture, lateral resolution, displacement vector, strain tensor, shear modulus
Other articles by Dr Chikayoshi Sumi
Readers of this article also read:
An appraisal of ultrasound fetal biometry in the first trimester
Besilesomab for imaging inflammation and infection in peripheral bone in adults with suspected osteomyelitis
Utilization of an ultrasound beam steering angle for measurements of tissue displacement vector and lateral displacement
Multidetector computed tomography in acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding
Study of optimal exposure windows using 320-Detector rows dynamic volume CT
Cardiac MRI detection of a rare case of familial cardiac amyloidosis (Ser23Asn): case report with literature review
Ultrasonic agar phantom experiment for comparison of the measurement accuracy of tissue elasticity obtained by displacement vector measurement using lateral modulation with multidimensional autocorrelation and Doppler methods and corresponding one-dimensional methods
Erratum
Consideration of generated beam angles increases the accuracy of ultrasonic displacement measurements
- Testimonials
"... I was impressed at the rapidity of publication from submission to final acceptance." Dr Edwin Thrower, PhD, Yale University
- Imaging of peripheral vascular disease
- Capillary telangiectasia mimicking an active inflammatory MS-lesion in repetitive cMRIs
- Comparison of a new PillCam™ SB2 video capsule versus the standard PillCam™ SB for detection of small bowel disease
- F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET)-positive parotid incidentaloma: Prevalence and clinical significance




