Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Single-Sided Ultrasound Imaging of the Bone Cortex: Anatomy, Tissue Characterization and Blood Flow.

Advances in experimental medicine and biology(2022)

Cited 1|Views2
No score
Abstract
In this chapter, we first review the reasons why conventional ultrasonography fails to image the interior of bones. Next we show our recent work on imaging a cortical bone layer with ultrasound. Revealing the shape of the cortex of a bone, in particular its thickness, is of interest for evaluating bone strength. In addition we describe how the process of reconstructing a truthful image of the bone cortex includes the estimation of ultrasound wave-speed in cortical bone tissue. Cortical bone exhibits elastic anisotropy, which causes anisotropy of ultrasound wave-speed as well. Therefore a faithful and high-quality picture of the bone cortex is obtained if wave-speed anisotropy is taken into account during image reconstruction. Capitalizing on prior knowledge on the elastic anisotropy of cortical bone, a procedure for estimating wave-speed and its anisotropy is described. It is based on the measurement of a head-wave velocity and an autofocus approach. The latter relies on the fact that the reconstructed ultrasound image shows optimal quality if the wave-speed model is correct. In order to achieve real-time imaging of a bone cortex, image reconstruction is performed with a delay-and-sum algorithm. Finally, we report recent advances in the measurement of blood flow in cortical bone.
More
Translated text
Key words
Blood flow,Cortical bone,Elastic anisotropy,Ultrasound imaging,Wave refraction,Wave-speed estimation
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined