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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Rotation elastogram: a novel method to visualize local rigid body rotation under quasi-static compression

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TLDR
A spatial compounding approach is utilized and significantly-improved rotation elastogram is demonstrated using this technique, demonstrating the improvement in the lateral motion tracking accuracy and its effects on the quality of rotational elastograms.
Abstract
During manual palpation of breast masses, the perception of its stiffness and slipperiness are the two commonly used information by the physician. In order to reliably and quantitatively obtain this information several non-invasive elastography techniques have been developed that seek to provide an image of the underlying mechanical properties, mostly stiffness-related. Very few approaches have visualized the "slip" at the lesion-background boundary that only occurs for a loosely-bonded benign lesion. It has been shown that axial-shear strain distribution provides information about underlying slip. One such feature, referred to as "fill-in" was interpreted as a surrogate of the rotation undergone by an asymmetrically-oriented-loosely bonded-benign-lesion under quasi-static compression. However, imaging and direct visualization of the rotation itself has not been addressed yet. In order to accomplish this, the quality of lateral displacement estimation needs to be improved. In this simulation study, we utilize spatial compounding approach and assess the feasibility to obtain good quality rotation elastogram. The angular axial and lateral displacement estimates were obtained at different insonification angles from a phantom containing an elliptical inclusion oriented at 45°, subjected to 1% compression from the top. A multilevel 2D-block matching algorithm was used for displacement tracking and 2D-least square compounding of angular axial and lateral displacement estimates was employed. By varying the maximum steering angle and incremental angle, the improvement in the lateral motion tracking accuracy and its effects on the quality of rotational elastogram were evaluated. Results demonstrate significantly-improved rotation elastogram using this technique.

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Citations
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Application of Synthetic Aperture Imaging to Non-Invasive Vascular Elastography

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the feasibility of using synthetic aperture (SA) imaging to accurately estimate the 2D displacement vector, thereby enhancing the performance of NIVE, and demonstrated that as few as eight transmit elements can generate strain elastograms with a minimal loss of image quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Importance of the Ultrasound Probe Angle on the Rotation Fill-in Signature in Ultrasound Axial-Shear Strain Imaging.

TL;DR: An experimental and numerical study of the rotation fill-in signature as a function of the probe's tilt angle is presented, arguing that the formulation of a tumor model with a bonding condition dependence may have potential implications in correct tumor classification.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A hybrid displacement estimation method for ultrasonic elasticity imaging

TL;DR: A novel estimation method that combines the strengths of quality-guided tracking, multi-level correlation, and phase-zero search to achieve high levels of accuracy and robustness is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Axial–Shear Strain Distributions in an Elliptical Inclusion Model: Experimental Validation and in vivo Examples With Implications to Breast Tumor Classification

TL;DR: Axial-shear strain fill-in inside an inclusion may be a unique signature of stiff, loosely bonded, ellipsoidal or elongated inclusions at non-normal orientations that may be useful as a marker of benignity of benign breast lesions that are generally stiff, elongated and loosely bonded to the host tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elastography: A decade of progress (2000-2010)

TL;DR: The specific purpose of this review is to describe the progress of the work on elastography at the University of Texas Medical School-Houston in the past decade, and to relate it to earlier work on this topic in the pre- ceding decade.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benign lesions of the female breast simulating cancer

Max Cutler
- 14 Oct 1933 - 
TL;DR: It is the purpose of this communication to describe several innocent states of the breast which simulate cancer and discuss the diagnosis and treatment of some borderline conditions the exact nature and future course of which it is becoming increasingly difficult to estimate as they are.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benign lesions of the breast

TL;DR: The physician, general practitioner, or specialist must advise patients with breast tumors as to proper management, and a frequently overlooked fact is that at least an equal number develop benign breast disease requiring surgery.
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