Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

A two-beam acoustic system for tissue analysis

T D Sachs and C D Janney

Show affiliations


In the 'thermo-acoustic sensing technique' (TAST), a burst of sound, called the 'thermometer' beam, is passed through tissue and its transit time is measured. A focused sound field, called the heating field, then warms a small volume in the path of the thermometer beam, in proportion to the absorption. Finally, the thermometer beam burst is repeated and its transit time subtracted from that of the initial thermometer burst. This difference measures the velocity perturbation in the tissue produced by the heating field. Experiments on a fixed human brain showed an ability to distinguish between various tissue types combined with a spatial resolution of better than 3 mm. Should predictions based on the data and theory prove correct, TAST may become a non-invasive alternative to biopsy. The basic theory, predictions of signals from interesting tissues, potential applications and foreseeable problems are presented.


PACS

43.80.Qf Medical diagnosis with acoustics (in PACS, see also 87.63.D−)

87.19.L- Neuroscience

87.50.wp Therapeutic applications

43.35.Ud Thermoacoustics, high temperature acoustics, photoacoustic effect

87.19.X- Diseases

Subjects

Medical physics

Biological physics

Dates

Issue 2 (March 1977)



  1. A two-beam acoustic system for tissue analysis

    T D Sachs and C D Janney 1977 Phys. Med. Biol. 22 327

  2. Biological functions of soliton and extra electron motion in DNA structure

    Guo-Ping Zhou 1989 Phys. Scr. 40 698

  3. The Laminar Flame Speedup by 22Ne Enrichment in White Dwarf Supernovae

    David A. Chamulak et al 2007 ApJ 655 L93

  4. Design and development of a microscopic model for polarization

    E Petridou et al 2009 Phys. Educ. 44 589

  5. Production of phantom materials using polymer powder sintering under vacuum

    P Homolka and R Nowotny 2002 Phys. Med. Biol. 47 N47

  6. The Evolution of Galaxies in X-Ray-luminous Groups

    Tesla E. Jeltema et al. 2007 ApJ 658 865

  7. GeV-scale electron acceleration in a gas-filled capillary discharge waveguide

    S Karsch et al 2007 New J. Phys. 9 415

  8. Exact results for a tunnel-coupled pair of trapped Bose–Einstein condensates

    Huan-Qiang Zhou et al 2003 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 36 L113

  9. Current status of the quantum metrology triangle

    Mark W Keller 2008 Metrologia 45 102

  10. Mass Accretion Rate of Rotating Viscous Accretion Flow

    Myeong-Gu Park 2009 ApJ 706 637

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.