Aaron Fenster et al 2001 Phys. Med. Biol. 46 R67 doi:10.1088/0031-9155/46/5/201
Aaron Fenster1, Dónal B Downey and H Neale Cardinal
Show affiliationsUltrasound is an inexpensive and widely used imaging modality for the diagnosis and staging of a number of diseases. In the past two decades, it has benefited from major advances in technology and has become an indispensable imaging modality, due to its flexibility and non-invasive character. In the last decade, research investigators and commercial companies have further advanced ultrasound imaging with the development of 3D ultrasound. This new imaging approach is rapidly achieving widespread use with numerous applications.
The major reason for the increase in the use of 3D ultrasound is related to the limitations of 2D viewing of 3D anatomy, using conventional ultrasound. This occurs because: (a) Conventional ultrasound images are 2D, yet the anatomy is 3D, hence the diagnostician must integrate multiple images in his mind. This practice is inefficient, and may lead to variability and incorrect diagnoses. (b) The 2D ultrasound image represents a thin plane at some arbitrary angle in the body. It is difficult to localize the image plane and reproduce it at a later time for follow-up studies.
In this review article we describe how 3D ultrasound imaging overcomes these limitations. Specifically, we describe the developments of a number of 3D ultrasound imaging systems using mechanical, free-hand and 2D array scanning techniques. Reconstruction and viewing methods of the 3D images are described with specific examples. Since 3D ultrasound is used to quantify the volume of organs and pathology, the sources of errors in the reconstruction techniques as well as formulae relating design specification to geometric errors are provided. Finally, methods to measure organ volume from the 3D ultrasound images and sources of errors are described.
Issue 5 (May 2001)
Received 6 November 2000
Aaron Fenster et al 2001 Phys. Med. Biol. 46 R67
S Urazhdin et al 2004 Supercond. Sci. Technol. 17 88
I P Iliev et al 2008 Quantum Electron. 38 436
R Willink 2007 Metrologia 44 105
M R James 2005 J. Opt. B: Quantum Semiclass. Opt. 7 S198
Christian Foltin 2002 Nonlinearity 15 2053
Q Jia et al 2009 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 190 012157
E Despiau-Pujo and P Chabert 2009 Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 18 045028
Karl-Erik Thylwe 2005 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 38 235
Sigfrido Leschiutta 2005 Metrologia 42 S10