Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'Side Lobe' found in 7 articles
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Beamforming
The wider the ultrasound beam, the more severe the problem with volume averaging and the beam-width artifact, to avoid this, the ultrasound beam can be shaped with lenses.
Different possibilities to focus the beam:
Mechanical focusing is performed by placing an acoustic lens on the surface of the transducer or using a transducer with a concave face.
Electronic focusing uses multiple phased array (annular or linear) elements, sequentially fired to focus the beam.
Conventional multi-element transducers are electronically focused in order to minimize beam width. This transducer type can be focused electronically only along the long axis of the probe where there are multiple elements, along the short axis (elevation axis) are conventional transducers only one element wide. Electronic focusing in any axis requires multiple transducer elements arrayed along that axis. Short axis focusing of conventional multi-element transducers requires an acoustic lens which has a fixed focal length.
For operation at frequencies at or even above 10 MHz, quantization noise reduces contrast resolution. Digital beamforming gives better control over time delay quantization errors. In digital beamformers the delay accuracy is improved, thus allowing higher frequency operation. In analog beamformers, delay accuracy is in the order of 20 ns.
Phased beamformers are suitable to handle linear phased arrays and are used for sector formats such as required in cardiography to improve image quality. Beamforming in ultrasound instruments for medical imaging uses analog delay lines. The signal from each individual element is delayed in order to steer the beam in the desired direction and focuses the beam.
The receive beamformer tracks the depth and focuses the receive beam as the depth increases for each transmitted pulse. The receive aperture increase with depth. The lateral resolution is constant with depth, and decreases the sensitivity to aberrations in the imaged tissue. A requirement for dynamic control of the used elements is given. Since often a weighting function (apodization) is used for side lobe reduction, the element weights also have to be dynamically updated with depth.

See also Huygens Principle.
Tissue Harmonic Imaging
(THI) Tissue harmonic imaging (also called native harmonic imaging) is a signal processing technique which addresses ultrasound limitations like penetration and resolution. Tissue harmonic imaging reduces noise and clutter by improving signal to noise ratio and resolution. The signal penetration in soft tissue increases as the transmit frequency is decreased, by simultaneous decreased image resolution. As an ultrasound wave propagates through the target media a change occurs in the shape and frequency of the transmitted signal. The change is due to the normal resistance of tissue to propagate sound energy. This resistance and the resulting signal change is called a harmonic oscillation.
For harmonic imaging the input frequency doubles the output frequency, for example a transmit frequency of 3.0 MHz. which would provide maximum penetration will return a harmonic frequency of 6.0 MHz. The returning higher frequency signal has to only travel one direction to the probe. The advantages of high frequency imaging and the one-way travel effect are decreased reverberation, beam aberration, and side lobes, as well as increased resolution and cystic clearing.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]