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Diagnostic Ultrasound Imaging: Inside Out

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TLDR
Diagnostic Ultrasound Imaging provides a unified description of the physical principles of ultrasound imaging, signal processing, systems and measurements that enable practicing engineers, students and clinical professionals to understand the essential physics and signal processing techniques behind modern imaging systems.
Abstract
Diagnostic Ultrasound Imaging provides a unified description of the physical principles of ultrasound imaging, signal processing, systems and measurements. This comprehensive reference is a core resource for both graduate students and engineers in medical ultrasound research and design. With continuing rapid technological development of ultrasound in medical diagnosis, it is a critical subject for biomedical engineers, clinical and healthcare engineers and practitioners, medical physicists, and related professionals in the fields of signal and image processing. The book contains 17 new and updated chapters covering the fundamentals and latest advances in the area, and includes four appendices, 450 figures (60 available in color on the companion website), and almost 1,500 references. In addition to the continual influx of readers entering the field of ultrasound worldwide who need the broad grounding in the core technologies of ultrasound, this book provides those already working in these areas with clear and comprehensive expositions of these key new topics as well as introductions to state-of-the-art innovations in this field. * Enables practicing engineers, students and clinical professionals to understand the essential physics and signal processing techniques behind modern imaging systems as well as introducing the latest developments that will shape medical ultrasound in the future* Suitable for both newcomers and experienced readers, the practical, progressively organized applied approach is supported by hands-on MATLAB code and worked examples that enable readers to understand the principles underlying diagnostic and therapeutic ultrasound* Covers the new important developments in the use of medical ultrasound: elastography and high-intensity therapeutic ultrasound. Many new developments are comprehensively reviewed and explained, including aberration correction, acoustic measurements, acoustic radiation force imaging, alternate imaging architectures, bioeffects: diagnostic to therapeutic, Fourier transform imaging, multimode imaging, plane wave compounding, research platforms, synthetic aperture, vector Doppler, transient shear wave elastography, ultrafast imaging and Doppler, functional ultrasound and viscoelastic models

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Journal ArticleDOI

Optoacoustic Dermoscopy of the Human Skin: Tuning Excitation Energy for Optimal Detection Bandwidth With Fast and Deep Imaging in vivo

TL;DR: Computer models are applied to investigate the optoacoustic frequency response generated by simulated skin and propose energy ranges required for skin imaging with considerations of laser safety standards.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasonic sculpting of virtual optical waveguides in tissue.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that patterned ultrasound can define and control the trajectory of light in tissue using pressure-induced index contrasts, and it is shown that virtual light pipes can be created deep into the tissue.
Journal ArticleDOI

In-plane ultrasonic needle tracking using a fiber-optic hydrophone

TL;DR: A method for directly visualizing the needle tip using an integrated fiber-optic ultrasound receiver in conjunction with the imaging probe used to acquire B-mode ultrasound images has strong potential to improve the safety and efficiency of ultrasound-guided needle insertions.
PatentDOI

Charge gradient microscopy

TL;DR: In this article, a method for rapid imaging of a material specimen includes positioning a tip to contact the material specimen, and applying a force to a surface of the material sample via the tip, generating a signal produced by contact between the tip and the surface and detecting the removed electrical charge induced through the tip during movement of the tip across the surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrafast Ultrasound Imaging as an Inverse Problem: Matrix-Free Sparse Image Reconstruction

TL;DR: Two different techniques are presented, which take advantage of fast and matrix-free formulations derived for the measurement model and its adjoint, and rely on sparsity of US images in well-chosen models to restore high-quality images from fewer raw data than state-of-the-art approaches.
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