The invention relates to an ultrasound, phased array imaging system and more particularly, to an imaging system having means to form either 2-D or 3-D motion images of moving parts of a body. These moving parts are typically blood flows in vessels such as arteries or the heart. A tissue is defined as clutter.
The invention particularly finds applications in the field of medical ultrasound imaging.
Clutter filtering is necessary to extract flow information from received Doppler signals. In current systems, the number of Doppler temporal signal samples used to produce flow information is usually between eight and sixteen. The number of temporal signal samples, i. e. successive signals along a transmission beam, is defined as an “ensemble length”.
Ultrasonic images are subject to image artifacts arising from a number of sources such as reverberation, multipath echoes, and coherent wave interference. These artifacts manifest themselves in various ways in the images, which can be broadly described as tissue image. Strong anatomic structures like arterial walls or cardiac walls mask the weak signals generated by blood. Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide ultrasonic image information in a format in which tissue structures, called clutter, does not significantly impair the images of the body region. For example, it would be desirable to provide ultrasonic image information in a format in which tissue information may be filtered for rejection from flow information.
It is already known to image the body using Doppler information. Doppler information has been used to image the body in two distinct ways. One Doppler imaging technique is commonly referred to as Doppler velocity imaging. As is well known, this technique involves the acquisition of Doppler data at different locations called sample volumes over the image plane of an ultrasonic image. The Doppler data is acquired over time and used to estimate the Doppler phase shift or frequency at each discrete sample volume. The Doppler phase shift or frequency corresponds to the velocity of tissue motion or fluid flow within the body, with the polarity of the shift indicating direction of motion or flow. This information may be color coded in accordance with the magnitude of the shift or velocity and of its polarity, and usually overlaid over a structural image of the tissue in the image plane to define the structure of the moving organs or flowing fluids. The colors in the image can provide an indication of the speed of blood flow and its direction in the heart and blood vessels, for instance.
A second Doppler technique is known as power Doppler. This power Doppler technique does not provide estimations of the velocity of motion of organ or of fluid flow. Instead, this power Doppler technique provides the measured signal intensity of the received Doppler signals that exhibit a Doppler shift. This Doppler signal intensity can be measured at each sample volume and displayed in a color variation. Unlike Doppler velocity imaging, power Doppler does not present the problems of directionality determination and low sensitivity that are characteristic of velocity imaging. Color power Doppler simply displays the Doppler signal intensity at a sample volume in a coded color.
Like color Doppler velocity imaging, the color power Doppler display is conventionally displayed with a structural B mode image to define the organ or tissue structure in which motion is occurring. Since the value at each sample volume can be averaged over time or based upon a peak value, and is not subject to the constant changes of velocity and direction which are characteristic of Doppler velocity signals, the color power Doppler display can be presented as a stable display of motion or flow conditions in the body.
It is already known from the publication entitled “Clutter Filters Adapted to Tissue Motion in Ultrasound Color Flow Imaging”, by S. Bjaerum, H. Torp, K. Kristffersen, in IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control, Vol. 49, no. 6, pp. 693-704, June 2002, to process ultrasonic image data for clutter filtering. The ultrasonic image data are usually produced by a number of Doppler signal samples from eight to sixteen ensemble lengths (column 1, end of the first paragraph). Clutter rejection is performed by mixing down the signal with the estimate of the mean frequency prior to high pass filtering. The best results were obtained by mixing down the signal with non-constant phase increments estimated from the signal. This constitutes an adaptive clutter filtering algorithm for color flow velocity imaging.
It is an object of the invention to provide an ultrasound imaging system comprising processing means to increase the frame rate of Doppler flow velocity imaging or Doppler power imaging by reducing the number of temporal signal samples, called ensemble length EL, used to produce Doppler information. It is particularly an object of the invention to produce Doppler information using a number of ensemble lengths inferior to or equal to six. Preferably, it is an object of the invention to provide an ultrasound imaging system comprising processing means to use a number of ensemble lengths, which is reduced to three or four ensemble lengths, out of the eight to sixteen temporal signal samples previously required for forming an “ensemble length” along a transmission beam.
It is a further object of the invention to provide such an ultrasound imaging system comprising filtering means to reject the clutter information.
It is a further object of the invention to provide such an ultrasound imaging system for forming either 2-D or 3-D ultrasound Doppler images in real time, such as Doppler flow velocity images or Doppler power images in real time.
The technical problem lies in that, when using such a small number of ensemble lengths (three or four ensemble lengths), it is no more possible to process the ultrasonic image data using third order filters for clutter demodulation. Only second order filters can be used. Such second order filters are less efficient than the known third order filters. They show selectivity proprieties that are drastically reduced with respect to third order filters.
According to the invention, the use of a minimized number of temporal signal samples is compensated by the use of an increased number of spatial signal samples. The spatial information is used several times: in a first stage to perform an adaptive clutter demodulation for estimating flow amplitude to the exception of flow velocity, and in a second stage, to perform a mean clutter demodulation for estimating flow velocity to the exception of flow amplitude.
The ultrasound viewing system of the invention comprises means, hereafter called “small ensemble length filtering”, appropriate to reduce the number of the successive temporal signal samples practically to three or four successive temporal signals required for forming an “ensemble length” along a transmission beam, while having means for clutter filtering. This system presents the advantage of reducing the acquisition time, possibly dividing the acquisition time by more than two. Minimizing the acquisition time duration with respect to the known systems permits of displaying 2-D Doppler images in real time or 3-D Doppler images in real time. The system of the invention presents the further advantage to provide Doppler images that are not deteriorated by the “small ensemble length technique”.
The invention is described hereafter in detail in reference to the following diagrammatic drawings, wherein:
The invention relates to an ultrasound imaging system, also called ultrasonic viewing system, which has means to form real time 2-D or 3-D Doppler images of fluid flow, for instance the blood flow of a vessel or the heart. This ultrasound viewing system has means to minimize the acquisition time duration with respect to conventional ultrasound systems. According to the invention, only three or four, and no more than five successive signal samples, out of the eight signal samples usually used in the cited prior art, are necessary to measure fluid flow characteristics in a moving body part. This operation of minimizing the number of successive temporal signal samples may divide the acquisition time by two.
According to the invention, the fact that few temporal samples are available is compensated by the fact that a large number of spatial samples is used. The number of temporal signal samples is defined as “ensemble length”, denoted by EL. An object of interest, such as a vessel or the heart, called target, receives three to five successive transmissions pulses, which allows analyzing the temporal variations of the successive signal samples, due to the displacement of the target.
Referring first to
According to the invention, for each transmission beam, this beamforming system 10, 12, 14, 16 simultaneously forms, in 2-D or in 3-D, several receive echo signals denoted by RF.
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More specifically, the amplitude and phase of the blood flow are evaluated with ensemble lengths of three and four, using high-pass filtering techniques after clutter demodulation. These high-pass filters provide more than 60 dB attenuation at DC, and they have a cutoff that is high enough to eliminate the clutter signal.
The used filters are preferably Infinite Impulse Response (HR) filters. Finite Impulse Response (FIR) filters have the characteristic that they do not introduce distortions on the velocity estimation, however they do not provide sufficient attenuation at DC. Instead, Infinite Impulse Response (IIR) filters provide higher attenuation at DC and have higher slopes than FIR filters but their minimum possible cutoffs are limited mainly due to the small size of the ensemble length.
One main constraint in the definition of such filters is the order limitation related to the small size of the ensemble lengths. The determination of the amplitude of the flow requires at least one valid output sample after filtering, while the determination of the flow velocity using the autocorrelation method requires at least two valid output samples after filtering. With ensemble lengths of four, the filters that can be used are of second order if the flow velocity is required and can be of third order, with some limitations on the obtainable cutoff, if only the flow amplitude is required.
According to the invention, for example, second order filters, denoted by order 2 Butterworth, using a projection initialization method, provide the most complete answer to the previous requirements. Chebyshev-II filters, Rs=−60 dB order 2 filters have similar characteristics. As initialization method, those skilled in the art may use for example a method described by Edward S. Chornoboy, in a publication entitled “Initialization for Improved IIR Filter Performance”, published in IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SIGNAL PROCESSING, VOL. 40, No. 3, March 1992, or any method yielding appropriate initialization parameters and steps.
In order to evaluate the impact of the EL reduction, the performances of such filters are compared to filters having the same cutoff characteristics but designed for ensemble lengths of six. One main result of the comparison is that the selectivity of filters usable for EL=4 is much lower than for filters usable for EL=6. Indeed, for EL=6, order 3 filters with slopes of 60 dB per decade in the stopband can be used whereas for EL=4, the maximum slope is 40 dB per decade.
The filters amplitude and phase responses are evaluated using complex sinusoidal input data.
The equation characterizing IIR filters is recursive, hence the initialization of such filters is essential. The main methods for initializing the filters are zero, step and projection. Projection initialization is an appropriate approach for ensemble lengths of six or more. Projection initialization is also proposed by Torp et alii, and by E.Chormonoy. It has been verified that projection initialization is still a very appropriate method for ensemble lengths of four. As an example, the projection initialization method of the IIR filters has been successfully applied to the small ensemble lengths technique of the invention.
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It seems that such a spatial averaging would result in a decrease of the image resolution. However, in fact, this spatial averaging operation enhances the structures of interest, which improve the visualization of said object of interest, and eventually improves the visualization of the images.
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Usually, the Doppler flow values are mapped to color values for display. The color values are applied to the scan converter and display processor 55, which spatially arranges the color values in the desired image format. The color values are displayed as pixels on a display 70, wherein each color represents a particular velocity of flow in a particular direction at that pixel location. The color flow velocity information can be overlaid with a structural image of the interior of the body utilizing the structural information provided by the 2-D or 3-D B mode processor 19. This 2-D or 3-D compound color image can show both the direction and velocity of blood flow, as well as the structure of the vessels or organs, which contain the flowing blood.
The Doppler system of
User operation of the system of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03300139.7 | Sep 2003 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB04/02892 | 9/2/2004 | WO | 3/23/2006 |