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1.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; PP2024 Apr 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38607722

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We demonstrate the use of ultrasound to receive an acoustic signal transmitted from a radiological clip designed from a custom circuit. This signal encodes an identification number and is localized and identified wirelessly by the ultrasound imaging system. METHODS: We designed and constructed the test platform with a Teensy 4.0 microcontroller core to detect ultrasonic imaging pulses received by a transducer embedded in a phantom, which acted as the radiological clip. Ultrasound identification (USID) signals were generated and transmitted as a result. The phantom and clip were imaged using an ultrasonic array (Philips L7-4) connected to a Verasonics™ Vantage 128 system operating in pulse inversion (PI) mode. Cross-correlations were performed to localize and identify the code sequences in the PI images. RESULTS: USID signals were detected and visualized on B-mode images of the phantoms with up to sub-millimeter localization accuracy. The average detection rate across 30,400 frames of ultrasound data was 98.1%. CONCLUSION: The USID clip produced identifiable, distinguishable, and localizable signals when imaged. SIGNIFICANCE: Radiological clips are used to mark breast cancer being treated by neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) via implant in or near treated lesions. As NAC progresses, available marking clips can lose visibility in ultrasound, the imaging modality of choice for monitoring NAC-treated lesions. By transmitting an active signal, more accurate and reliable ultrasound localization of these clips could be achieved and multiple clips with different ID values could be imaged in the same field of view.

2.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 151(4): 2701, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35461481

ABSTRACT

Ensuring the consistency of spectral-based quantitative ultrasound estimates in vivo necessitates accounting for diffraction, system effects, and propagation losses encountered in the tissue. Accounting for diffraction and system effects is typically achieved through planar reflector or reference phantom methods; however, neither of these is able to account for the tissue losses present in vivo between the ultrasound probe and the region of interest. In previous work, the feasibility of small titanium beads as in situ calibration targets (0.5-2 mm in diameter) was investigated. In this study, the importance of bead size for the calibration signal, the role of multiple echoes coming from the calibration bead, and sampling of the bead signal laterally through beam translation were examined. This work demonstrates that although the titanium beads naturally produce multiple reverberant echoes, time-windowing of the first echo provides the smoothest calibration spectrum for backscatter coefficient calculation. When translating the beam across the bead, the amplitude of the echo decreases rapidly as the beam moves across and past the bead. Therefore, to obtain consistent calibration signals from the bead, lateral interpolation is needed to approximate signals coming from the center of the bead with respect to the beam.


Subject(s)
Titanium , Calibration , Equipment Design , Phantoms, Imaging , Ultrasonography/methods
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