Abstract

In ophtalmic ultrasonography, axial B-scans are seriously deteriorated owing to the presence of the crystalline lens. This strongly aberrating medium affects both spatial and contrast resolution and causes important distortions. To deal with this issue, an adapted beamforming (BF) has been developed and experimented with a 20MHz linear array working with a custom US research scanner. The adapted BF computes focusing delays that compensate for crystalline phase aberration, including refraction effects. This BF was tested in vitro by imaging a wire phantom through an eye phantom consisting of a synthetic gelatin lens, shaped according to the unaccommodated state of an adult human crystalline lens, anatomically set up in an appropriate liquid (turpentine) to approach the in vivo velocity ratio. Both image quality and fidelity from the adapted BF were assessed and compared with conventional delay-and-sum BF over the aberrating medium. Results showed 2-fold improvement of the lateral resolution, greater sensitivity and 90% reduction of the spatial error (from 758μm to 76μm) with adapted BF compared to conventional BF. Finally, promising first ex vivo axial B-scans of a human eye are presented.

Highlights

  • In ophthalmic ultrasonography, axial B-scans are useful to depict essential intraocular structures and to perform biometric measurement in view of intraocular lens implantation

  • An eye-adapted beamforming for axial B-scans free from crystalline lens aberration : In vitro and ex vivo results with a 20 MHz linear array

  • Results showed 2-fold improvement of the lateral resolution, greater sensitivity and 90% reduction of the spatial error with adapted BF compared to conventional BF

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Summary

Introduction

Axial B-scans are useful to depict essential intraocular structures (e.g. the crystalline lens, the macula, the papilla, the optic nerve) and to perform biometric measurement (e.g. axial length) in view of intraocular lens implantation. An eye-adapted beamforming for axial B-scans free from crystalline lens aberration : In vitro and ex vivo results with a 20 MHz linear array Inserm, Université Franois Rabelais de Tours, Imagerie et cerveau UMR U930, Tours, France.

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