In vivo ultrasonic attenuation in cetacean soft tissues

  • Gray M
  • Rogers P
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Abstract

In vivo ultrasonic attenuation was estimated for extracranial soft tissues of two Tursiops truncatus and one Delphinapterus leucas. Backscatter data was non-invasively collected as part of routine health-based ultrasound examinations using a transducer operating in the 1.6–3.7 MHz frequency range. Data collected over the proximal mandible and temporal regions was processed to yield attenuation estimates using a reference tissue phantom whose properties had been independently determined. The estimated attenuations were at the low end of the range of literature-reported values for mammalian fatty and connective tissues. A companion model-based analysis quantified errors arising from tissue composition and sound speed uncertainties.

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Gray, M. D., & Rogers, P. H. (2017). In vivo ultrasonic attenuation in cetacean soft tissues. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 141(2), EL83–EL88. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4976040

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