Advances in ultrasound elasticity imaging.
10.1007/s13534-017-0014-7
- Author:
Sung Jae KWON
1
;
Mok Kun JEONG
Author Information
1. Division of Electrical, Electronic, and Communication Engineering, Daejin University, 1007 Hoguk-ro, Pocheon, Gyeonggi 11159, Korea. jmk@daejin.ac.kr
- Publication Type:Review
- Keywords:
Ultrasound;
Elasticity;
Strain imaging;
Sonoelastography;
Vibro-acoustography;
Transient elastography;
ARFI imaging;
Supersonic imaging
- MeSH:
Elasticity Imaging Techniques;
Elasticity*;
Humans;
Methods;
Ultrasonics;
Ultrasonography*
- From:
Biomedical Engineering Letters
2017;7(2):71-79
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
The most troublesome of ultrasonic B-mode imaging is the difficulty of accurately diagnosing cancers, benign tumors, and cysts because they appear similar to each other in B-mode images. The human soft tissue has different physical characteristics of ultrasound depending on whether it is normal or not. In particular, cancers in soft tissue tend to be harder than the surrounding tissue. Thus, ultrasound elasticity imaging can be advantageously used to detect cancers. To measure elasticity, a mechanical force is applied to a region of interest, and the degree of deformation measured is rendered as an image. Depending on the method of applying stress and measuring strain, different elasticity imaging modalities have been reported, including strain imaging, sonoelastography, vibro-acoustography, transient elastography, acoustic radiation force impulse imaging, supersonic imaging, and strain-rate imaging. In this paper, we introduce various elasticity imaging methods and explore their technical principles and characteristics.