4.6 Article

High-Quality Ultrafast Power Doppler Imaging Based on Spatial Angular Coherence Factor

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TUFFC.2023.3253257

Keywords

Adaptive beamforming; microvascular imaging; spatial and angular coherence factor (SACF); ultrafast power Doppler imaging (uPDI)

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In this study, a SACF beamformer was proposed for improved uPDI. The results showed that SACF-uPDI significantly enhanced contrast and resolution, while suppressing background noise compared to conventional uPDI methods based on DAS and CF.
The morphological and hemodynamic changes of microvessels are demonstrated to be related to the diseased conditions in tissues. Ultrafast power Doppler imaging (uPDI) is a novel modality with a significantly increased Doppler sensitivity, benefiting from the ultrahigh frame rate plane-wave imaging (PWI) and advanced clutter filtering. However, unfocused plane-wave transmission often leads to a low imaging quality, which degrades the subsequent microvascular visualization in power Doppler imaging. Coherence factor (CF)-based adaptive beamformers have been widely studied in conventional B-mode imaging. In this study, we propose a spatial and angular coherence factor (SACF) beamformer for improved uPDI (SACF-uPDI) by calculating the spatial CF across apertures and the angular CF across transmit angles, respectively. To identify the superiority of SACF-uPDI, simulations, in vivo contrast-enhanced rat kidney, and in vivo contrast-free human neonatal brain studies were conducted. Results demonstrate that SACF-uPDI can effectively enhance contrast and resolution and suppress background noise simultaneously, compared with conventional uPDI methods based on delay-and-sum (DAS) (DAS-uPDI) and CF (CF-uPDI). In the simulations, SACF-uPDI can improve the lateral and axial resolutions compared with those of DAS-uPDI, from 176 to 108 mu m of lateral resolution, and from 111 to 74 mu m of axial resolution. In the in vivo contrast-enhanced experiments, SACF achieves 15.14-and 5.6-dB higher contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), 15.25-and 3.68-dB lower noise power, and 240-and 15-mu m narrower full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) than DAS-uPDI and CF-uPDI, respectively. In the in vivo contrast-free experiments, SACF achieves 6.11-and 1.09-dB higher CNR, 11.93-and 4.01-dB lower noise power, and 528-and 160-mu m narrower FWHM than DAS-uPDI and CF-uPDI, respectively. In conclusion, the proposed SACF-uPDI method can efficiently improve the microvascular imaging quality and has the potential to facilitate clinical applications.

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