The technical field of the application is methods and apparatus for high speed image acquisition rates for 3D medical imaging.
Ultrasound is a noninvasive, easily portable and relatively inexpensive tool for medical imaging and diagnosis. Ultrasound waves emitted by a transducer are reflected at tissue boundaries and recorded by a probe, allowing a user to detect boundaries of anatomical structures with different sonic impedance. Bonneau et al. (2003), Adaptive Volume Construction from Ultrasound Images of a Human Heart, Joint EUROGRAPHICS-IEEE TCVG Symposium on Visualization, herein incorporated by reference. The cost, noninvasiveness and portability of ultrasound have led to the wide scale adoption of ultrasound imaging of a variety of organs. In particular, ultrasound is often used to detect motion, for example, the movement of a fetus or an organ such as the heart, to detect potential pathologies. Such imaging of the heart, referred to as echocardiography, poses particular challenges because diagnosis of some heart problems, such as mitral valve prolapse, involves analyzing movements of the heart that are subtle and can be detected only if the imaging device can acquire images rapidly.
In conventional 3D volume scanning, the typical pattern is to scan a series of R-theta sector slices, with R denoting the radius of the sector and theta denoting the angle of the sector. Each sector slice is located at a different elevation position. This elevation position will be referred to as the “phi” location. In this conventional 3D volume, the theta value of each slice is constant. The pattern that results when the scan is viewed in the phi-theta plane is a rectangle. (This pattern will be referred to as a “rectangular scanning pattern.”) For cardiac scanning of the left ventricle of the heart from the apical position, use of a rectangular scanning pattern is inefficient as the left ventricle is elliptical (in many cases approximately circular) in the phi-theta plane. This inefficient aspect of conventional 3D volume scanning patterns in echocardiography is illustrated in
Accordingly, an embodiment of the invention provided herein is a method of scanning of a medical volume of interest in a subject, including scanning an R-theta sector slice. R denotes radius of the sector and theta denotes angle of the sector. Theta is a function of phi, and phi denotes an elevation location of the R-theta slice. The scanning is performed at first values of phi and theta. The method also includes varying phi and theta to at least second values of phi and theta. The method also includes iterating the scanning at the varied values acquires at least one image at an improved acquisition rate compared to that of scanning methods using a constant value of theta.
In a further embodiment, the function is a piecewise, stepwise or “case by case” function. In another embodiment, the function is a discontinuous function.
In another embodiment, the function results in values of theta such that a scanning pattern, when viewed from a phi-theta plane, is a conic section, such as an ellipse. In another embodiment, the function results in values of theta such that a scanning pattern, when viewed from the phi-theta plane, is a polygon.
Another embodiment of the invention provides a medical imaging device for scanning a volume of interest in a subject. The device is designed to scan an R-theta sector slice, wherein R denotes radius of the sector, theta is a function of phi and denotes angle of the sector, and phi denotes an elevation location of the R-theta slice. The device is further designed to vary phi and theta over a plurality of values of phi and theta and iterate the scanning at the plurality of resulting varied values of phi and theta, wherein the device acquires at least one image at an improved acquisition rate compared to that of scanning methods using a constant value of theta.
In a further embodiment, at least one from the plurality of functions is selected to generate a desired pattern for scanning the volume of interest. In another embodiment, a volume of interest to be scanned is selected by a user. In a further embodiment, the user selects the function that is appropriate for the desired volume of interest. In another embodiment, the device detects a volume of interest that is being scanned and selects the function that yields a high image acquisition rate for the desired volume of interest. In another embodiment, the device detects the boundaries of a scanned volume and produces a scanning pattern comprising the boundaries of the volume.
In another embodiment, the medical imaging device is an ultrasound imaging device. In a further embodiment, the medical imaging device is a three-dimensional ultrasound scanner. In another embodiment, the medical imaging device is a three-dimensional cardiac ultrasound scanner.
The methods and apparatus herein are applied to ultrasound scanning applications, such as cardiac scanning, however, other medical imaging devices and other target organs are within the scope of the invention.
Ultrasound imaging systems include a transducer that acts as both a transmitter and a receiver. The transducer consists of either a single element or an array of multiple elements. Ultrasound elements may be made of several materials including, but not limited to: piezocrystals, lead zirconate titanate (PZT), piezo-electric material, and piezo-composite material. In transmission mode, the transducer converts electrical signals into mechanical vibrations, which are transmitted into the body as ultrasound waves. In reception mode, the echoes (backscatter) of the ultrasound waves are converted into electrical signals, then processed.
Conventional ultrasound scanning methods have used rectangular scanning patterns. As shown in
An implementation of sector scanning with an array of ultrasound elements is shown in
Beams are formed and steered through constructive interference and the controlling of the phasing, i.e. the relative phase shift in superimposing waves, of various elements. Constructive interference occurs when the summation or combination of two waves results in a wave with an amplitude greater than that of the individual waves.
In 3D volume scanning, a typical pattern is to scan a series of R-theta sector slices with each slice located at a different phi location. In conventional scanning as performed heretofore, the theta extent of each slice is constant. The pattern that results from scanning with a constant value of theta is a rectangle when viewed in the phi-theta plane. For cardiac scanning of the left ventricle from the apical position, rectangular scanning is inefficient as the left ventricle is elliptical (in many cases approximately circular) in the phi-theta plane. This inefficient aspect of conventional 3D volume scanning patterns in echocardiography is illustrated in
To improve efficiency, various embodiments of the invention provided herein employ elliptical 3D scanning Thus the volume rate in 3D scanning is increased with little or no loss in diagnostic utility, for example, when scanning the left ventricle in the apical view.
Various embodiments of the invention provided herein improve image acquisition rates by modifying a scanning pattern such that theta is made a function of phi. Accordingly, elliptical scanning patterns are facilitated which, as shown in
For applications in which there is a need to maintain a uniformity of scanning time for each of a plurality of sub-volumes within the volume of interest, the same number of scan lines for each sub-volume may be useful. As the sub-volumes are no longer rectangular in the theta-phi plane, hence a more complex shape for each sub-volume is needed. The more complex shapes allow for a pattern at the sub-volume interface line that has the effect that it lessens a temporary and unwanted artifact sometimes observed along the interface line.
Additional embodiments of the invention provided herein include medical imaging devices to implement the above methods in a three-dimensional ultrasound scanner for cardiac or other organs. Some embodiments of such a device allow the user to select a function from a plurality of functions to generate a desired pattern for scanning the volume of interest. Related embodiments of these devices select an appropriate function for efficient scanning of the desired volume of interest and/or detect the boundaries of the volume of interest and design a function that produces an efficient scanning function for the volume of interest.
It will furthermore be apparent that other and further forms of the invention, and embodiments other than the specific and exemplary embodiments described above, may be devised without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims and their equivalents, and therefore it is intended that the scope of this invention encompasses these equivalents and that the description and claims are intended to be exemplary and should not be construed as further limiting.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB07/54253 | 10/18/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/16/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60862316 | Oct 2006 | US |