Abstract
Most techniques for contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging require linear propagation to detect nonlinear scattering of contrast agent microbubbles. Waveform distortion due to nonlinear propagation impairs their ability to distinguish microbubbles from tissue. As a result, tissue can be misclassified as microbubbles, and contrast agent concentration can be overestimated; therefore, these artifacts can significantly impair the quality of medical diagnoses. Contrary to biological tissue, lipid-coated gas microbubbles used as a contrast agent allow the interaction of two acoustic waves propagating in opposite directions (counter-propagation). Based on that principle, we describe a strategy to detect microbubbles that is free from nonlinear propagation artifacts. Invitro images were acquired with an ultrasound scanner in a phantom of tissue-mimicking material with a cavity containing a contrast agent. Unlike the default mode of the scanner using amplitude modulation to detect microbubbles, the pulse sequence exploiting counter-propagating wave interaction creates no pseudoenhancement behind the cavity in the contrast image. © 2012 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.
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CITATION STYLE
Renaud, G., Bosch, J. G., Ten Kate, G. L., Shamdasani, V., Entrekin, R., De Jong, N., & Van Der Steen, A. F. W. (2012). Counter-propagating wave interaction for contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging. Physics in Medicine and Biology, 57(21). https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/57/21/L9
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