Coherent plane-wave compounding (CPWC) has attracted significant attention in preclinical research and clinical diagnosis. However, a trade-off exists in CPWC between the image quality and frame rate. Null subtraction imaging (NSI), as a novel beamforming method, can realize high-quality imaging with enhanced lateral resolution and suppressed grating lobes. This study explores NSI to reduce the number of emissions while preserving the imaging quality. The performance of the proposed method is assessed using the Plane-Wave Imaging Challenge in Medical Ultrasound datasets, including phantom and in vivo datasets. The results verify the potential of NSI in terms of frame rate improvement compared to the conventional delay and sum beamforming method. NSI with 5 and 15 plane-wave emissions is evaluated. For example, for the experimental phantom datasets, NSI with 15 plane-wave emissions improves the lateral full-width at half maximum by 0.10 in comparison to DAS with 75 plane-wave emissions. Moreover, the corresponding contrast ratio and generalized contrast-to-noise ratio increase from 25.11 to 31.19 dB and 0.63 to 0.68, respectively, indicating contrast improvement. Thus, compared to DAS with 75 plane-wave emissions, the proposed method accelerates data acquisition by a factor of 5, resulting in remarkable frame rate improvement.
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