Abstract

BackgroundShort-lag spatial coherence (SLSC) imaging, a newly proposed ultrasound imaging scheme, can offer a higher lesion detectability than conventional B-mode imaging. It requires a high focusing quality which can be satisfied by the synthetic aperture imaging mode. However, traditional nonadaptive synthesis for the SLSC still offers an unsatisfactory resolution. The spatial coherence estimation on the receive aperture cannot fully utilize the coherence information in two-dimensional (2D) echo data.MethodsTo overcome these drawbacks, an improved SLSC scheme with adaptive synthesis on dual apertures is proposed in this paper. The minimum variance (MV) beamformer is applied in synthesizing both the receiving and transmitting apertures, while the SLSC function is estimated on both apertures as well. In this way, the resolution is enhanced by the MV implementation, while the coherence in dual apertures is fully utilized.ResultsSimulations, phantom experiments, and in vivo studies are conducted to evaluate the performance of the proposed method. Results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves the best performance in terms of the contrast ratio (CR), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), and the speckle signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Specifically, compared with the delay-and-sum (DAS) method, the proposed method achieves 42.5% higher CR, 412.7% higher CNR, and 402.9% higher speckle SNR in simulations. The resolution is also better than the DAS and conventional SLSC beamformers.ConclusionsThe proposed method is a promising technique for improving the SLSC imaging quality and can provide better visualization for medical diagnosis.

Highlights

  • Short-lag spatial coherence (SLSC) imaging is a newly proposed beamforming technique for medical ultrasound imaging [1, 2]

  • Since a temporal kernel is adopted in the SLSC algorithm, it is necessary to adopt the temporal smoothing in the minimum variance (MV) process, which averages the covariance matrix through the time index n1 to n2

  • SLSC image formation The beamforming processes in “Transmit aperture weighting for the SLSC imaging” and “Receive aperture weighting for the SLSC imaging” sections are quite similar, or “symmetric” in a more precise way

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Summary

Introduction

Short-lag spatial coherence (SLSC) imaging is a newly proposed beamforming technique for medical ultrasound imaging [1, 2]. Compared with conventional B-mode methods, the SLSC can better detect lesions inside tissues [1]. Beams are highly diffracted in the near-field and the deep regions, which means that the image quality inside these areas could suffer a severe degradation [9] This limits the diagnostic value of the SLSC imaging. Short-lag spatial coherence (SLSC) imaging, a newly proposed ultrasound imaging scheme, can offer a higher lesion detectability than conventional B-mode imaging. It requires a high focusing quality which can be satisfied by the synthetic aperture imaging mode. The spatial coherence estimation on the receive aperture cannot fully utilize the coherence information in two-dimensional (2D) echo data

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