Abstract

Application of the Nakagami statistical model and associated m parameter has the potential to suppress artifacts from adjustable system parameters and operator selections typical in echo amplitude-coded microbubble-enhanced ultrasound (MEUS). However, the feasibility of applying m estimation and determination of the associated Nakagami distribution features for in vivo MEUS remain to be investigated. Sensitivity and discriminability of m-coded MEUS are often limited since raw envelopes are regulated by complex radiofrequency (RF) and video-frequency (VF) processing. This study aims to develop an improved imaging approach for the m parameter estimation which can overcome the above limitations in in vivo condition. The regulation effects of RF processing of pulse-inversion (PI) harmonic detection techniques and VF processing of logarithmic compression in Nakagami distributions were investigated in MEUS. A window-modulated compounding moment estimator was developed to estimate the MEUS m values. The sensitivity and discriminability of m-coded MEUS were quantified with contrast-to-tissue ratio (CTR), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), and axial and lateral resolutions, which were validated through in vivo perfusion experiments on rabbit kidneys. Regulated by RF and VF processing, the distributions of MEUS obeyed the Nakagami statistical model. The Nakagami-fitted correlation coefficient was 0.996±0.003 (P<0.05 in the t test and P<0.001 in the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test). Among each of the m-coded MEUS methods, the logarithmic m-coded PI-MEUS scheme effectively characterized the peripheral rim perfusion features and details within the renal cortex. The CTR and CNR in this region reached 7.9±1.5dB and 34.4±1.7dB, respectively, which were higher than those of standard amplitude-coded MEUS; and the axial and lateral resolutions were 1.02±0.02 and 0.91±0.02mm, respectively, which were slightly longer than those of amplitude-coded MEUS. The Nakagami statistical model could characterize MEUS even when the envelope distributions were regulated by RF and VF processing. The logarithmic m-coded PI-MEUS scheme significantly improved the sensitivity, discriminability, and robustness of m estimation in MEUS. The scheme provides an option to remove artifacts in echo amplitude-coded MEUS and to distinctly characterize the inherent microvasculature enhanced by microbubbles, with potential to improve and expand the role of MEUS in diagnostic ultrasound.

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