Abstract

Plane-wave ultrasound contrast imaging offers a faster, less destructive means for imaging microbubbles compared with traditional ultrasound imaging. Even though many of the most acoustically responsive microbubbles have resonant frequencies in the lower-megahertz range, higher frequencies (>3 MHz) have typically been employed to achieve high spatial resolution. In this work we implement and optimize low-frequency (1.5-4 MHz) plane-wave pulse inversion imaging on a commercial, phased-array imaging transducer in vitro and illustrate its use in vivo by imaging a mouse xenograft model. We found that the 1.8-MHz contrast signal was about four times that acquired at 3.1 MHz on matched probes and nine times greater than echoes received on a higher-frequency probe. Low-frequency imaging was also much more resilient to motion. In vivo, we could identify sub-millimeter vasculature inside a xenograft tumor model and easily assess microbubble half-life. Our results indicate that low-frequency imaging can provide better signal-to-noise because it generates stronger non-linear responses. Combined with high-speed plane-wave imaging, this method could open the door to super-resolution imaging at depth, while high power pulses could be used for image-guided therapeutics.

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