This invention relates to medical diagnostic ultrasound systems and, in particular, to ultrasound systems which perform measurements of a Doppler waveform automatically.
In a vascular study numerous blood flow characteristics of a patient are measured and quantified. The clinician begins the exam by acquiring spectral Doppler data from the heart or a blood vessel such as the carotid artery. The patient's vascular anatomy is displayed in a two or three dimensional image on the ultrasound system display and a sample volume cursor is moved to a point in the heart or blood vessel where measurements are to be made. Spectral Doppler data is acquired over time from the sample volume location and displayed as a spectral waveform. Once a steady spectral display is being produced, the clinician begins to record the continuous spectral waveform. After several minutes of the Doppler waveform have been acquired and stored the examination of the patient ends and the clinician reviews, analyzes, and makes measurements of the acquired spectral waveform.
The clinician analyzes the waveform stored by the Cineloop® memory of the ultrasound system by scanning through the spectral data with the trackball on the user interface, looking for a heart cycle of data from which measurements are to be initially made. In order to make measurements of that heart cycle, a measurement program is launched, which can be done either before or after the heart cycle has been located. The clinician may have to mark a cursor on the selected heart cycle at key diagnostic points such as end diastole or at the peak velocity of the waveform in order to key the measurement program to specific points in the data which are to be used in the measurement. The measurement program will then calculate the selected measurement and display a result. This procedure is then repeated for numerous measurements and heart cycles. There can be upwards of 100 such measurements made in a typical vascular or cardiac examination, and this process of launching a measurement program and establishing an initial position for the measurement must be repeated each time. The repetitive nature of these tasks adds a significant amount of time to the overall exam and can lead to repetitive stress injuries to the clinician. Accordingly it is desirable to automate this process so that these measurements can be made more quickly and accurately while reducing repetitive hand motions for the clinician.
In accordance with the principles of the present invention, a diagnostic ultrasound system and method are described which enables a user to automatically compute measurements of a Doppler waveform. The peak velocity values in the waveform are automatically identified by, for example, a peak velocity tracing algorithm, which may be done on the displayed waveform or in the background. The cardiac cycle with the highest peak velocity is identified together with key points of that cardiac cycle waveform. The automatically selected cardiac cycle can be accepted by the clinician or another starting point for measurements can be selected either manually or by another automated heart cycle identification. The accepted cardiac cycle and the values at the key points are then used to make the desired measurements automatically and the results are displayed. The process can be extended to automatically making measurements on heart cycle data preceding or following the peak velocity heartbeat, and/or to making measurements of other high peak velocity cardiac cycles. Among the measurements which can be automated in this way are acceleration/deceleration time, peak systole velocity, minimum diastole velocity, end diastole velocity, time average peak velocity, resistive index, pulsatility index, systolic and diastolic ratio, pressure gradient, velocity time integral, heart rate, slope and time associated with a heart cycle.
In the drawings:
a, 5b, and 5c illustrate display screens for measuring the heart rate in a Doppler display.
a, 6b, and 6c illustrate display screens in which the peak velocity value in a Doppler display has been identified in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
Referring first to
Intermittently during the reception of Doppler echoes, B mode echoes are received. These echoes are also formed into I and Q components which may then be amplitude detected by taking the square root of the sum of the squares of the I and Q values in a B mode image processor 64. The B mode image processor also arranges the B mode echoes into a desired display form by scan conversion. The resultant two or three dimensional image of the anatomy is coupled to a Doppler measurement processor 30 where it is prepared for display with spectral Doppler data and measurement data processed as discussed below.
The post processed Doppler data is applied to a peak velocity detector 58 and the Doppler measurement processor 30. The Doppler measurement processor further processed the Doppler data for the display of a real time sequence of spectral line information. The peak velocity detector compares the Doppler data against a noise threshold NOISEth to determine the peak velocity point of a spectral line, as discussed more fully in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,287,753 and 5,634,465. The peak velocity detector 22 may also perform filtering of the Doppler data and may also be used to identify mean velocity levels as discussed more fully in the '753 patent. The Doppler measurement processor 30 thus provides both an anatomical B mode image and a spectral Doppler display with peak and/or mean velocity values automatically identified as the discussed in the aforementioned patents.
The ultrasound display 32 will also preferably show an ECG trace drawn in response to reception of an R-wave signal. The R-wave is the electrical physiological signal produced to stimulate the heart's contraction, and is conventionally detected by an electrocardiograph (ECG).
Operation of the Doppler measurement processor 30 in accordance with the principles of the present invention is illustrated by the block diagram of
The measurement processor 50, in addition to receiving velocity peak information from the waveform peak tracer, receives control signals from the user interface 99 and measurement tools from a measurement tool store 52. A “measurement tool” is a software program which analyzes ultrasound data an performs a specific measurement using the data. Examples of measurement tools are heart rate tools, peak velocity tools, and a number of other tools described below. When the ultrasound system user desires to make a particular measurement the user interface 99 is used to select the measurement tool for that measurement. A typical user interface 60, taken from a touchpanel display of a constructed implementation of the present invention, is shown in
The user interface 99 also is used to enter control signals for the measurement processor. Such control signals may include commands such as the selection of a particular cardiac cycle or group of cardiac cycles on which to make a measurement as explained more fully below.
The measurement processor 50 operates on Doppler data to make the measurement desired by the user. The results of the measurement are coupled to a graphics processor 44 from which graphical measurement results are processed for display on and/or with the spectral Doppler data by the display processor 46. As illustrated below, these results may be displayed numerically, graphically, or both.
An automated measurement made in accordance with the principles of the present invention is shown in
a illustrates the heart rate measurement being made on a typical ultrasound system display 34. At the top of the display is a B mode image 110 of anatomy containing a blood vessel 114. A cursor line is manipulated over the B mode image until a sample volume cursor 112 on the line is located at the point where spectral Doppler data is to be acquired, in this case in the center of the blood vessel 114. Doppler data is then acquired from this location and displayed as a scrolling spectral display 120 as it is acquired. In this example all of this information has been stored in Cineloop memory and is being analyzed. The first measurement made is the heart rate, which is done for the cardiac cycle containing the maximum peak velocity identified as described above. A portion of the spectral display 120 containing this cardiac cycle is displayed on the screen 34 in response to activation of the heart rate tool by button 62, the goalposts 92 and 94 are placed at the beginning and end of the identified peak velocity cardiac cycle, and the computed heart rate value of 72 bpm is displayed on the screen 34, in this example just to the right of the B mode image 110.
The exemplary user interface of
Similarly, if the left side of the button 66 is touched to move the selected cardiac cycle of
Another example of the present invention is shown in
Another measurement which can be made in accordance with the present invention is a time/slope measurement. A time/slope measurement is made by actuating button 68 on the user interface of
Tools can be used to make tracings of the identified peak velocity waveform as shown in
Another measurement which can be made in accordance with the present invention is the average heart rate over multiple heart cycles as shown in
Variations of the examples described above are within the scope of the present invention. For example, the user can be given the option to manually adjust the peak velocity tracing or values on which the measurements are to be made, as described in our pending international patent application number IB2005/052572. Another variation is for the waveform peak tracer to identify the peak velocities of the analyzed heart sequence ranging from the highest peak velocity to the lowest peak velocity. A control can be provided for the user to skip from one heart cycle to another in the sequence of the peak velocities. This will enable the user to first view and measure the cardiac cycle with the maximum peak velocity, then the cardiac cycle with the second highest peak velocity, then the cardiac cycle with third highest peak velocity, and so forth. Another variation is to jump directly to the cardiac cycle with the lowest peak velocity. Other variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB07/50216 | 1/22/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/18/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60762628 | Jan 2006 | US |