Abstract

Ultrafast power Doppler imaging (uPDI) using high-frame-rate plane-wave transmission is a new microvascular imaging modality that offers high Doppler sensitivity. However, due to the unfocused transmission of plane waves, the echo signal is subject to interference from noise and clutter, resulting in a low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and poor image quality. Adaptive beamforming techniques are effective in suppressing noise and clutter for improved image quality. In this study, an adaptive beamformer based on a united spatial-angular adaptive scaling Wiener (uSA-ASW) postfilter is proposed to improve the resolution and contrast of uPDI. In the proposed method, the signal power and noise power of the Wiener postfilter are estimated by uniting spatial and angular signals, and a united generalized coherence factor (uGCF) is introduced to dynamically adjust the noise power estimation and enhance the robustness of the method. Simulation and in vivo data were used to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method. The results show that the uSA-ASW can achieve higher resolution and significant improvements in image contrast and background noise suppression compared with conventional delay-and-sum (DAS), coherence factor (CF), spatial-angular CF (SACF), and adaptive scaling Wiener (ASW) postfilter methods. In the simulations, uSA-ASW improves contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) by 34.7 dB (117.3%) compared with DAS, while reducing background noise power (BNP) by 52 dB (221.4%). The uSA-ASW method provides full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) reductions of [Formula: see text] (59.5%) and [Formula: see text] (56.9%), CNR improvements of 25.6 dB (199.9%) and 42 dB (253%), and BNP reductions of 46.1 dB (319.3%) and 12.9 dB (289.1%) over DAS in the experiments of contrast-free human neonatal brain and contrast-free human liver, respectively. In the contrast-free experiments, uSA-ASW effectively balances the performance of noise and clutter suppression and enhanced microvascular visualization. Overall, the proposed method has the potential to become a reliable microvascular imaging technique for aiding in more accurate diagnosis and detection of vascular-related diseases in clinical contexts.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call