Moving-source elastic wave reconstruction for high-resolution optical coherence elastography

  • Hsieh B
  • Song S
  • Nguyen T
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2016 The Authors. Optical coherence tomography (OCT)-based elasticity imaging can map soft tissue elasticity based on speckle-tracking of elastic wave propagation using highly sensitive phase measurements of OCT signals. Using a fixed elastic wave source and moving detection, current imaging sequences have difficulty in reconstructing tissue elasticity within speckle-free regions, for example, within the crystalline lens of the eye. We present a moving acoustic radiation force imaging sequence to reconstruct elastic properties within a speckle-free region by tracking elastic wave propagation from multiple laterally moving sources across the field of view. We demonstrate the proposed strategy using heterogeneous and partial speckle-free tissue-mimicking phantoms. Harder inclusions within the speckle-free region can be detected, and the contrast-to-noise ratio slightly enhanced compared to current OCE imaging sequences. The results suggest that a moving source approach may be appropriate for OCE studies within the large speckle-free regions of the crystalline lens.

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APA

Hsieh, B.-Y., Song, S., Nguyen, T.-M., Yoon, S. J., Shen, T. T., Wang, R. K., & O’Donnell, M. (2016). Moving-source elastic wave reconstruction for high-resolution optical coherence elastography. Journal of Biomedical Optics, 21(11), 116006. https://doi.org/10.1117/1.jbo.21.11.116006

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