Abstract Objective. Motivated by the diagnostic value of tissue viscosity beyond elasticity, the goal of this work is to develop robust methodologies based on shear wave elastography (SWE) to reconstruct combined elasticity and viscosity maps of soft tissues out of the measurement plane.Approach.Building on recent advancements in full-waveform inversion in reconstructing elasticity maps beyond the measurement plane, we propose to reconstruct a complete viscoelasticity map by novel combination of three ideas: (a) multiresolution imaging, where lower frequency content is used to reconstruct low resolution map, which is then utilized as a starting point for higher resolution reconstruction by including higher frequency content; (b) acquiring SWE data on multiple planes from multiple pushes, one at a time, and then simultaneously using all the data to invert for a single viscoelasticity map; (c) sequential reconstruction where combined viscoelasticity reconstruction is followed by fixing the elasticity map (and thus kinematics), and repeating the reconstruction but just for the viscosity map.Main results.We examine the proposed methodology using synthetic SWE data to reconstruct the viscoelastic properties of both homogeneous and heterogeneous tumor-like inclusions with shear modulus ranging from 3 to 20 kPa, and viscosity ranging from 1 to 3 Pa·s. Final validation is performedin silico, where the annular inclusion is reconstructed using noisy data with varying signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) of 30, 20 and 10 dB. While elasticity images are reasonably reconstructed even for poor SNR of 10 dB, viscosity imaging seem to require better SNR.Significance.This work, analogous to reconstructing 3D images from 2D measurements, offers a feasibility study for achieving 3D viscoelasticity reconstructions using conventional ultrasound scanners, potentially leading to biomarkers with greater specificity compared to currently available 2D elasticity images.
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3D Multi-plane Multi-resolution Shear Wave Elastography
We utilize Full Waveform Inversion (FWI) framework to convert shear wave elastography (SWE) measurements on multiple planes to a single three-dimensional (3D) image of elasticity using gradient optimization to adjust the elasticity map until the mismatch between simulated and measured particle velocities is minimized. Several ideas are brought together to ensure the robustness and effectiveness of the proposed FWI: correlation-based matching between measurements and simulation, high-fidelity finite element simulation of 3D shear waves in incompressible elastic media, multi-resolution parametrization to help with convergence, multi-frequency continuation for finer resolution imaging, and multi-push illumination. With the help of in silico and phantom validation studies, the algorithm is shown to be effective in providing images outside the measurement plane, including reconstructing full 3D images from 2D.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2111234
- PAR ID:
- 10659428
- Publisher / Repository:
- 2024 IEEE Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control Joint Symposium (UFFC-JS)
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Location:
- Taipei, Taiwan
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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Abstract Objective. With the ultimate goal of reconstructing 3D elasticity maps from ultrasound particle velocity measurements in a plane, we present in this paper a methodology of inverting for 2D elasticity maps from measurements on a single line.Approach. The inversion approach is based on gradient optimization where the elasticity map is iteratively modified until a good match is obtained between simulated and measured responses. Full-wave simulation is used as the underlying forward model to accurately capture the physics of shear wave propagation and scattering in heterogeneous soft tissue. A key aspect of the proposed inversion approach is a cost functional based on correlation between measured and simulated responses.Main results. We illustrate that the correlation-based functional has better convexity and convergence properties compared to the traditional least-squares functional, and is less sensitive to initial guess, robust against noisy measurements and other errors that are common in ultrasound elastography. Inversion with synthetic data illustrates the effectiveness of the method to characterize homogeneous inclusions as well as elasticity map of the entire region of interest.Significance. The proposed ideas lead to a new framework for shear wave elastography that shows promise in obtaining accurate maps of shear modulus using shear wave elastography data obtained from standard clinical scanners.more » « less
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