S Zhao et al 2007 Phys. Med. Biol. 52 2055 doi:10.1088/0031-9155/52/8/002
S Zhao, D E Kruse, K W Ferrara and P A Dayton
Show affiliationsThe goal of ultrasonic molecular imaging is the detection of targeted contrast agents bound to receptors on endothelial cells. We propose imaging methods that can distinguish adherent microbubbles from tissue and from freely circulating microbubbles, each of which would otherwise obscure signal from molecularly targeted adherent agents. The methods are based on a harmonic signal model of the returned echoes over a train of pulses. The first method utilizes an 'image–push–image' pulse sequence where adhesion of contrast agents is rapidly promoted by acoustic radiation force and the presence of adherent agents is detected by the signal change due to targeted microbubble adhesion. The second method rejects tissue echoes using a spectral high-pass filter. Free agent signal is suppressed by a pulse-to-pulse low-pass filter in both methods. An overlay of the adherent and/or flowing contrast agents on B-mode images can be readily created for anatomical reference. Contrast-to-tissue ratios from adherent microbubbles exceeding 30 dB and 20 dB were achieved for the two methods proposed, respectively. The performance of these algorithms is compared, emphasizing the significance and potential applications in ultrasonic molecular imaging.
43.80.Qf Medical diagnosis with acoustics (in PACS, see also 87.63.D−)
Issue 8 (21 April 2007)
Received 12 October 2006, in final form 28 February 2007
Published 20 March 2007
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