Abstract

To correct the refraction aberration induced by the skull in photoacoustic imaging, a method for phase distortion compensation is proposed based on the angular spectrum theory with the aid of ultrasonic signals. This method first updates the speed of sound distribution by iteratively performing aberration correction in the ultrasonic reconstruction. Then the speed of sound distribution obtained with ultrasound-assisted serves as prior knowledge to address phase distortion compensation by adjusting the phase shift factor of the wavefront in different media. Finally, the aberration-corrected ultrasonic-photoacoustic dual-modality image can be obtained. Numerical simulations and phantom experiments confirm the effectiveness of this method. Specifically, in simulations, the position error of the proposed method is reduced from −13.61% to 1.27% in depth compared to the method based on the reconstruction with constant speed. Moreover, a real ex-vivo rabbit skull experiment illustrates the potential biological application of the proposed method in transcranial photoacoustic imaging.

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