Tissue mechanical properties can be obtained by algebraic direct inversion (ADI) of the shear-wave motion differential equation, which is insensitive to reflection and geometry of the pushing beam. Shear waves normally generated by a focused ultrasound pushing beam have limited spatial extent in depth and are transient in time, leading to noisy and unstable ADI results. A comb-shape acoustic radiation force distribution can generate shear waves with longer spatial extent and time duration, facilitating more robust ADI. For 400 μs, a linear array transducer simultaneously transmitted four unfocused pushing beams (12 on elements for each pushing beam, 8 off elements between beams) into a tissue-mimicking phantom (∼1.5 kPa) with a cylindrical inclusion (∼4 kPa). The ultrasound system (Verasonics Inc.) then immediately switched to flash imaging mode (frame rate = 2 kHz, spatial resolution = 0.31 mm) to measure shear-wave displacements in a 38 mm by 30 mm domain that was used for ADI. The reconstructed 2D shear elasticity map provides accurate shear elasticity estimates (background = 1.5 kPa with 7% variance; inclusion = 3.9 kPa with 15% variance) and excellent contrast between the background and inclusion.
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