Ultrafast 3-D Super Resolution Ultrasound using Row-Column Array specific Coherence-based Beamforming and Rolling Acoustic Sub-aperture Processing: In Vitro, In Vivo and Clinical Study
Joseph Hansen-Shearer, Jipeng Yan, Marcelo Lerendegui, Biao Huang,, Matthieu Toulemonde, Kai Riemer, Qingyuan Tan, Johanna Tonko, Peter D., Weinberg, Chris Dunsby, Meng-Xing Tang

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel coherence-based beamforming and rolling acoustic sub-aperture processing method for ultrafast 3-D super-resolution ultrasound imaging using row-column arrays, significantly improving image quality and reducing artefacts in clinical settings.
Contribution
The paper presents a new image reconstruction technique that enhances super-resolution ultrasound imaging with row-column arrays by reducing artefacts and noise, enabling higher frame rates and better clinical applicability.
Findings
Reduced false microbubble detections from 26% to 15%.
Noise level decreased by approximately 7 dB.
Achieved effective imaging frame rates over 4000 fps.
Abstract
The row-column addressed array is an emerging probe for ultrafast 3-D ultrasound imaging. It achieves this with far fewer independent electronic channels and a wider field of view than traditional 2-D matrix arrays, of the same channel count, making it a good candidate for clinical translation. However, the image quality of row-column arrays is generally poor, particularly when investigating tissue. Ultrasound localisation microscopy allows for the production of super-resolution images even when the initial image resolution is not high. Unfortunately, the row-column probe can suffer from imaging artefacts that can degrade the quality of super-resolution images as `secondary' lobes from bright microbubbles can be mistaken as microbubble events, particularly when operated using plane wave imaging. These false events move through the image in a physiologically realistic way so can be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound Imaging and Elastography · Ultrasound and Hyperthermia Applications · Photoacoustic and Ultrasonic Imaging
