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Auteur(s):J. Bercoff, M. Tanter, M. Fink
Titre:Supersonic Shear Imaging: a new technique for soft tissues elasticity mapping
Référence:IEEE Trans. Ultrason., Ferroelec., Freq. Contr. 51 (4), pp 374-409, 2004
Type de publication:Publication dans une revue à comité de lecture
Revue:
Soumis en Septembre 2003, accepté en Décembre 2003 et publié en Avril 2004

Résumé:
Supersonic Shear imaging (SSI) is a new ultrasound-based technique for real-time visualization of soft tissue viscoelastic properties. Using ultrasonic focused beams, it is possible to remotely generate mechanical vibration sources radiating low frequency shear waves inside tissues. Relying on this concept, SSI proposes to create such a source and make it move at a supersonic speed. In analogy with the “sonic boom” created by a supersonic aircraft, the resulting shear waves will interfere constructively along a Mach cone, creating two intense plane shear waves. These waves propagate through the medium and are progressively distorted by tissue heterogeneities. An ultrafast scanner prototype is able to both generate this supersonic source and image (5000 frames/s) the propagation of the resulting shear waves. Using inversion algorithms, the shear elasticity of medium can be mapped quantitatively from this propagation movie. SSI enables tissue elasticity mapping in less than 20 ms, even in strongly viscous medium like breast. Modalities such as shear compounding are implementable by tilting shear waves in different directions and improve the elasticity estimation. Results validating SSI in heterogeneous phantoms are presented. The first in vivo investigations made on healthy volunteers emphasize the potential clinical applicability of SSI for breast cancer detection.

 

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