4.5 Article

VECTOR PROJECTILE IMAGING: TIME-RESOLVED DYNAMIC VISUALIZATION OF COMPLEX FLOW PATTERNS

Journal

ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 9, Pages 2295-2309

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2014.03.014

Keywords

Ultrasound flow imaging; Vector estimation; Dynamic visualization; Vector projectile; Complex flow analysis

Funding

  1. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [GRF 785113-M]

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Achieving non-invasive, accurate and time-resolved imaging of vascular flow with spatiotemporal fluctuations is well acknowledged to be an ongoing challenge. In this article, we present a new ultrasound-based framework called vector projectile imaging (VPI) that can dynamically render complex flow patterns over an imaging view at millisecond time resolution. VPI is founded on three principles: (i) high-frame-rate broad-view data acquisition (based on steered plane wave firings); (ii) flow vector estimation derived from multi-angle Doppler analysis (coupled with data regularization and least-squares fitting); (iii) dynamic visualization of color-encoded vector projectiles (with flow speckles displayed as adjunct). Calibration results indicated that by using three transmit angles and three receive angles (-10 degrees, 0 degrees, +10 degrees for both), VPI can consistently compute flow vectors in a multi-vessel phantom with three tubes positioned at different depths (1.5, 4, 6 cm), oriented at different angles (-10 degrees, 0 degrees, +10 degrees) and of different sizes (dilated diameter: 2.2, 4.4 and 6.3 mm; steady flow rate: 2.5 mL/s). The practical merit of VPI was further illustrated through an anthropomorphic flow phantom investigation that considered both healthy and stenosed carotid bifurcation geometries. For the healthy bifurcation with 1.2-Hz carotid flow pulses, VPI was able to render multi-directional and spatiotemporally varying flow patterns (using a nominal frame rate of 416 fps or 2.4-ms time resolution). In the case of stenosed bifurcations (50% eccentric narrowing), VPI enabled dynamic visualization of flow jet and recirculation zones. These findings suggest that VPI holds promise as a new tool for complex flow analysis. (E-mail: alfred.yu@hku.hk) (C) 2014 World Federation for Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology.

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