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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A finite-element method model of soft tissue response to impulsive acoustic radiation force

TLDR
A finite-element method (FEM) model has been developed that simulates the dynamic response of tissues to an impulsive acoustic radiation force excitation from a linear array transducer, and applications include improving image quality, and distilling material and structural information from tissue's dynamic response to ARFI excitation.
Abstract
Several groups are studying acoustic radiation force and its ability to image the mechanical properties of tissue. Acoustic radiation force impulse (ARFI) imaging is one modality using standard diagnostic ultrasound scanners to generate localized, impulsive, acoustic radiation forces in tissue. The dynamic response of tissue is measured via conventional ultrasonic speckle-tracking methods and provides information about the mechanical properties of tissue. A finite-element method (FEM) model has been developed that simulates the dynamic response of tissues, with and without spherical inclusions, to an impulsive acoustic radiation force excitation from a linear array transducer. These FEM models were validated with calibrated phantoms. Shear wave speed, and therefore elasticity, dictates tissue relaxation following ARFI excitation, but Poisson's ratio and density do not significantly alter tissue relaxation rates. Increased acoustic attenuation in tissue increases the relative amount of tissue displacement in the near field compared with the focal depth, but relaxation rates are not altered. Applications of this model include improving image quality, and distilling material and structural information from tissue's dynamic response to ARFI excitation. Future work on these models includes incorporation of viscous material properties and modeling the ultrasonic tracking of displaced scatterers.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantifying hepatic shear modulus in vivo using acoustic radiation force.

TL;DR: Simulation and in vivo data to date demonstrate that this algorithm to quantify shear wave speed from radiation force-induced, ultrasonically-detected displacement data that is robust in the presence of poor displacement signal-to-noise ratio appears promising as a clinical tool for quantifying liver stiffness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medical ultrasound: imaging of soft tissue strain and elasticity

TL;DR: It is concluded that ultrasonic imaging of soft tissue strain and elasticity is now sufficiently well developed to have clinical utility and is anticipated that the technology will become a powerful mainstream investigative tool.
Journal ArticleDOI

An overview of elastography - an emerging branch of medical imaging.

TL;DR: This paper presents a classification of elasticity measurement and imaging techniques based on the methods used for generating a stress in the tissue, and measurement of the tissue response and presents various techniques of EI.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse (ARFI) Imaging: a Review.

TL;DR: Methods have been developed that utilize impulsive radiation force excitations, and ARFI images have spatial resolution comparable to that of B-mode, often with greater contrast, providing matched, adjunctive information, and SWEI images provide quantitative information about the tissue stiffness, typically with lower spatial resolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acoustic radiation force elasticity imaging in diagnostic ultrasound

TL;DR: This review focuses on ultrasound-based elasticity imaging methods that generate an acoustic radiation force to induce tissue displacements that can be performed noninvasively during routine exams to provide either qualitative or quantitative metrics of tissue elasticity.
References
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Book

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TL;DR: In this article, the linearized theory of elasticity was introduced and the elasticity of a one-dimensional motion of an elastic continuum was modeled as an unbound elastic continuum.
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Introduction to Fluid Mechanics

TL;DR: In this article, the physical concepts of fluid mechanics and methods of analysis, beginning from first principles, are discussed, and a more orderly approach to problem solving is presented, starting from basic equations, states all assumptions clearly, and relates results to expected physical behavior with the aid of 103 example problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calculation of pressure fields from arbitrarily shaped, apodized, and excited ultrasound transducers

TL;DR: A method for simulation of pulsed pressure fields from arbitrarily shaped, apodized and excited ultrasound transducers is suggested, which relies on the Tupholme-Stepanishen method for calculating pulsing pressure fields and can also handle the continuous wave and pulse-echo case.
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