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Journal ArticleDOI

A Virtual Instrument for Automated Measurement of Arterial Compliance

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TLDR
A simple instrument for noninvasive in vivo evaluation of arterial compliance using a single element ultrasound transducer that can measure arterial distension with a precision better than 5 and the end-diastolic arterial diameter with an accuracy of 1%.
Abstract
Measurement of arterial distensibility is very important in cardiovascular diagnosis for early detection of coronary heart disease and possible prediction of future cardiac events. Conventionally, B-mode ultrasound imaging systems have been used along with expensive vessel wall tracking systems for estimation of arterial distension and calculation of various estimates of compliance. We present a simple instrument for noninvasive in vivo evaluation of arterial compliance using a single element ultrasound transducer. The measurement methodology is initially validated using a proof of concept pilot experiment using a commercial ultrasound pulser-receiver. A prototype system is then developed around a PXI chassis using LABVIEW software. The virtual instrument employs a dynamic threshold algorithm to identify the artery walls and then utilizes a correlation based tracking technique to estimate arterial distension. The end-diastolic echo signals are averaged to reduce error in the automated diameter measurement process. The instrument allows automated measurement of the various measures of arterial compliance with minimal operator intervention. The performance of the virtual instrument was first analyzed using simulated data sets to establish the maximum measurement accuracy achievable under different input signal to noise ratio (SNR) levels. The system could measure distension with accuracy better than 10 μm for positive SNR. The measurement error in diameter was less than 1%. The system was then thoroughly evaluated by the experiments conducted on phantom models of the carotid artery and the accuracy and resolution were found to meet the requirements of the application. Measurements performed on human volunteers indicate that the instrument can measure arterial distension with a precision better than 5%. The end-diastolic arterial diameter can be measured with a precision better than 2% and an accuracy of 1%. The measurement system could lead to the development of small, portable, and inexpensive equipment for estimation of arterial compliance suitable in mass screening of "at risk" patients. The automated compliance measurement algorithm implemented in the instrument requires minimal operator input. The instrument could pave the way for dedicated systems for arterial compliance evaluation targeted at the general medical practitioner who has little or no expertise in vascular ultrasonography.

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Citations
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An Imageless Ultrasound Device to Measure Local and Regional Arterial Stiffness

TL;DR: An extension of ARTSENS is reported to enable measurement of cfPWV that now makes it the only fully automatic device that can measure both LAS and RAS and is compared with other state-of-the-art AS measurement systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arterial compliance probe for cuffless evaluation of carotid pulse pressure

TL;DR: This technique could provide a direct measurement of local PWV, arterial dimensions, and a calibration-free estimate of beat-by-beat local ΔP, and can be potentially extended for cuffless BP measurement and non-invasive characterization of central arteries with locally estimated biomechanical properties.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

An improved method for detection of carotid walls in ARTSENS

TL;DR: A method based on temporal motion of PW and DW over successive A-Mode frames to locate the common carotid artery (CCA) and a method for preprocessing the frames by using the transmitted pulse wavelet improved the detection rate significantly.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

ARTSENS® Pen: A portable, image-free device for automated evaluation of vascular stiffness

TL;DR: The ARTSENS® Pen was found to be capable of providing accurate and repeatable measures of arterial stiffness in an easy manner and has strong potential in large scale vascular screening.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Automatic measurement of lumen diameter of carotid artery in A-Mode ultrasound

TL;DR: A new method for measurement of lumen diameter from single line of Radio-Frequency Signal obtained from the common carotid artery (CCA) is proposed, free from fixed thresholds and uses shape fitting to get objective measurement.
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TL;DR: This population-based study shows that arterial stiffness is strongly associated with atherosclerosis at various sites in the vascular tree.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noninvasive Assessment of Arterial Stiffness and Risk of Atherosclerotic Events

TL;DR: The effects of current and future cardiovascular drugs on arterial stiffness are discussed, as is the relationship between arterial elasticity and endothelial function.
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Common Carotid Intima-Media Thickness and Arterial Stiffness Indicators of Cardiovascular Risk in High-Risk Patients The SMART Study (Second Manifestations of ARTerial disease)

TL;DR: Common carotid IMT anddistensibility are clear markers of cardiovascular risk in patients who already have vascular disease or atherosclerotic risk factors and IMT appears to discriminate between low- and high-risk patients better than distensibility.
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Current time-domain methods for assessing tissue motion by analysis from reflected ultrasound echoes-a review

TL;DR: An overview of time-domain techniques that have appeared in the literature over the past few years is presented, and their potential advantages over Doppler are examined, and the individual techniques are compared.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-invasive measurements of arterial structure and function: repeatability, interrelationships and trial sample size.

TL;DR: Under controlled experimental conditions there was good repeatability of measurements of indices between sessions of both intrinsic and functional arterial mechanical properties (central and carotid arterial compliance, intima-media thickness and brachial flow-mediated dilation).
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