Investigation of PVC plastisol tissue-mimicking phantoms for MR-and ultrasound-elastography
Simon Chatelin (ICube), Elodie Breton (ICube), Ajeethan Arulrajah, (ICube, IHU Strasbourg), C\'eline Giraudeau (IHU Strasbourg), Benoit Wach, (ICube), Laurence Meylheuc (ICube, INSA Strasbourg), Jonathan Vappou (ICube)

TL;DR
This study develops and characterizes PVC plastisol tissue-mimicking phantoms suitable for MR and ultrasound elastography, demonstrating their stability and comparable properties to biological tissues over time.
Contribution
It introduces a new preparation method for PVC plastisol phantoms compatible with both MR and ultrasound elastography, with comprehensive property characterization.
Findings
PVC plastisol phantoms have stable mechanical properties over 43 days.
The phantoms' acoustic and NMR properties are unaffected by cellulose addition.
Mechanical properties match those of biological soft tissues.
Abstract
Objective: Realistic tissue-mimicking phantoms are essential for the development, the investigation and the calibration of medical imaging techniques and protocols. Because it requires taking both mechanical and imaging properties into account, the development of robust, calibrated phantoms is a major challenge in elastography. Soft polyvinyl chloride gels in a liquid plasticizer (plastisol or PVCP) have been proposed as soft tissue-mimicking phantoms (TMP) for elasticity imaging. PVCP phantoms are relatively low-cost and can be easily stored over long time periods without any specific requirements. In this work, the preparation of a PVCP gel phantom for both MR and ultrasoundelastography is proposed and its acoustic, NMR and mechanical properties are studied.Material and methods: The acoustic and magnetic resonance imaging properties of PVCP are measured for different mass ratios…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound Imaging and Elastography · Ultrasound and Hyperthermia Applications · Ultrasonics and Acoustic Wave Propagation
