4.6 Article

Estimation of Mouse Carotid Arterial Wall Shear Stress Using High-Frequency Ultrasound Imaging

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TUFFC.2023.3262275

Keywords

Imaging; Estimation; Doppler effect; Blood flow; Ultrasonic imaging; Mice; Velocity measurement; Atherosclerotic plaque; Doppler flow imaging; high-frequency ultrasound (HFUS) imaging; small animal imaging; wall shear stress (WSS)

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This study proposes a 40-MHz high-frequency ultrasound (HFUS) imaging system for dynamic wall shear stress (WSS) estimation based on mouse carotid artery blood flow velocity gradient measurements. The method was tested on mice, and differences in time-averaged and oscillatory WSS were observed, which correlated with plaque formation. The proposed HFUS WSS imaging method is useful for investigating the WSS effect on atherosclerotic plaque development.
Wall shear stress (WSS) is a crucial hemodynamic factor that promotes atherosclerosis (plaque) development in arteries; although the relationship between WSS and arterial atherosclerosis has been explored in many animal studies, it is not fully understood. No suitable tool, however, exists for rapidly estimating dynamic WSS in small-animal studies. This study proposes a 40-MHz high-frequency ultrasound (HFUS) imaging system for dynamic WSS estimation based on mouse carotid artery blood flow velocity gradient measurements by vector Doppler imaging (VDI). Aliasing reduces the accuracy of Doppler measurements, which can be prevented by increasing the imaging frame rate. Conventionally, imaging is performed at two tilted angles by alternating between the angles; in the proposed method, the frame rate was doubled by imaging at each tilted angle sequentially and by then temporally aligning the sequences based on pulsatile flow characteristics. Velocity estimation using this method had low errors for both a steady-flow straight-tube and pulsatile flow 60%-stenosis phantom. The method was tested for wild-type (WT) C57BL/6 mice at 16 weeks old and apolipoprotein E knockout (ApoE KO) mice at 16 and 24 weeks old; differences in time-averaged and oscillatory WSS were observed, and histology confirmed that the 24-week ApoE KO mice with the highest oscillatory WSS had the greatest plaque formation. The proposed HFUS WSS imaging method can predict the location and extent of plaque development; thus, this method is useful for small-animal studies investigating the WSS effect on atherosclerotic plaque development.

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