Frequency-dependent attenuation reconstruction with an acoustic reflector

Med Image Anal. 2021 Jan:67:101875. doi: 10.1016/j.media.2020.101875. Epub 2020 Oct 17.

Abstract

Attenuation of ultrasound waves varies with tissue composition, hence its estimation offers great potential for tissue characterization and diagnosis and staging of pathology. We recently proposed a method that allows to spatially reconstruct the distribution of the overall ultrasound attenuation in tissue based on computed tomography, using reflections from a passive acoustic reflector. This requires a standard ultrasound transducer operating in pulse-echo mode and a calibration protocol using water measurements, thus it can be implemented on conventional ultrasound systems with minor adaptations. Herein, we extend this method by additionally estimating and imaging the frequency-dependent nature of local ultrasound attenuation for the first time. Spatial distributions of attenuation coefficient and exponent are reconstructed, enabling an elaborate and expressive tissue-specific characterization. With simulations, we demonstrate that our proposed method yields a low reconstruction error of 0.04 dB/cm at 1 MHz for attenuation coefficient and 0.08 for the frequency exponent. With tissue-mimicking phantoms and ex-vivo bovine muscle samples, a high reconstruction contrast as well as reproducibility are demonstrated. Attenuation exponents of a gelatin-cellulose mixture and an ex-vivo bovine muscle sample were found to be, respectively, 1.4 and 0.5 on average, consistently from different images of their heterogeneous compositions. Such frequency-dependent parametrization could enable novel imaging and diagnostic techniques, as well as facilitate attenuation compensation of other ultrasound-based imaging techniques.

Keywords: Attenuation; Computed tomography; Limited angle tomography; Speed of sound; Ultrasound.

MeSH terms

  • Acoustics*
  • Animals
  • Cattle
  • Humans
  • Phantoms, Imaging
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Tomography, X-Ray Computed*
  • Ultrasonography