Phase Aberration Correction for in vivo Ultrasound Localization Microscopy Using a Spatiotemporal Complex-Valued Neural Network
Paul Xing, Jonathan Por\'ee, Brice Rauby, Antoine Malescot, \'Eric, Martineau, Vincent Perrot, Ravi L. Rungta, Jean Provost

TL;DR
This paper introduces a complex-valued neural network approach for correcting skull-induced aberrations in transcranial ultrasound localization microscopy, significantly improving microvascular imaging resolution in vivo.
Contribution
The study presents a novel CV-CNN method leveraging spatiotemporal data to enhance transcranial ULM, outperforming traditional coherence-based techniques and enabling in vivo application.
Findings
Improved resolution by up to 25.8% in mice.
CV-CNN outperforms coherence-based methods in robustness.
Successful in vivo correction in a 6-month-old mouse.
Abstract
Ultrasound Localization Microscopy (ULM) can map microvessels at a resolution of a few micrometers (\mu m). Transcranial ULM remains challenging in presence of aberrations caused by the skull, which lead to localization errors. Herein, we propose a deep learning approach based on complex-valued convolutional neural networks (CV-CNNs) to retrieve the aberration function, which can then be used to form enhanced images using standard delay-and-sum beamforming. CV-CNNs were selected as they can apply time delays through multiplication with in-phase quadrature input data. Predicting the aberration function rather than corrected images also confers enhanced explainability to the network. In addition, 3D spatiotemporal convolutions were used for the network to leverage entire microbubble tracks. For training and validation, we used an anatomically and hemodynamically realistic mouse brain…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound Imaging and Elastography · Photoacoustic and Ultrasonic Imaging · Ultrasound and Hyperthermia Applications
