4,200 research outputs found

    Webcam-based distance and surface estimation system for microwave imaging

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    One of the critical steps in Medical Microwave Imaging (MMWI) algorithms is the calculation of the distances between the antenna and the synthetical focal point, due to the different propagation velocities in the tissues and background medium. In fact, it has a major influence on the image accuracy. As a result, it is very important to have a priori information about the shape of the body part under examination. Here we propose a low cost optical system based on a single commercial webcam. We validate the new system by showing an application to breast imaging, where we reconstruct the scatterers inside the breast using the real and estimated shapes. The results show very good resemblance, thus proving the new system supplies a reliable estimation of the breast shape.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Linear-Array Photoacoustic Imaging Using Minimum Variance-Based Delay Multiply and Sum Adaptive Beamforming Algorithm

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    In Photoacoustic imaging (PA), Delay-and-Sum (DAS) beamformer is a common beamforming algorithm having a simple implementation. However, it results in a poor resolution and high sidelobes. To address these challenges, a new algorithm namely Delay-Multiply-and-Sum (DMAS) was introduced having lower sidelobes compared to DAS. To improve the resolution of DMAS, a novel beamformer is introduced using Minimum Variance (MV) adaptive beamforming combined with DMAS, so-called Minimum Variance-Based DMAS (MVB-DMAS). It is shown that expanding the DMAS equation results in multiple terms representing a DAS algebra. It is proposed to use the MV adaptive beamformer instead of the existing DAS. MVB-DMAS is evaluated numerically and experimentally. In particular, at the depth of 45 mm MVB-DMAS results in about 31 dB, 18 dB and 8 dB sidelobes reduction compared to DAS, MV and DMAS, respectively. The quantitative results of the simulations show that MVB-DMAS leads to improvement in full-width-half-maximum about 96 %, 94 % and 45 % and signal-to-noise ratio about 89 %, 15 % and 35 % compared to DAS, DMAS, MV, respectively. In particular, at the depth of 33 mm of the experimental images, MVB-DMAS results in about 20 dB sidelobes reduction in comparison with other beamformers.Comment: This is the final version of this paper, which is accepted in the "Journal of Biomedical Optics". Compared to previous versions, this version contains more experiments and evaluatio

    A Prototype System for Measuring Microwave Frequency Reflections from the Breast

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    Microwave imaging of the breast is of interest for monitoring breast health, and approaches to active microwave imaging include tomography and radar-based methods. While the literature contains a growing body of work related to microwave breast imaging, there are only a few prototype systems that have been used to collect data from humans. In this paper, a prototype system for monostatic radar-based imaging that has been used in an initial study measuring reflections from volunteers is discussed. The performance of the system is explored by examining the mechanical positioning of sensor, as well as microwave measurement sensitivity. To gain insight into the measurement of reflected signals, simulations and measurements of a simple phantom are compared and discussed in relation to system sensitivity. Finally, a successful scan of a volunteer is described

    Thermal dosimetry for bladder hyperthermia treatment. An overview.

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    The urinary bladder is a fluid-filled organ. This makes, on the one hand, the internal surface of the bladder wall relatively easy to heat and ensures in most cases a relatively homogeneous temperature distribution; on the other hand the variable volume, organ motion, and moving fluid cause artefacts for most non-invasive thermometry methods, and require additional efforts in planning accurate thermal treatment of bladder cancer. We give an overview of the thermometry methods currently used and investigated for hyperthermia treatments of bladder cancer, and discuss their advantages and disadvantages within the context of the specific disease (muscle-invasive or non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer) and the heating technique used. The role of treatment simulation to determine the thermal dose delivered is also discussed. Generally speaking, invasive measurement methods are more accurate than non-invasive methods, but provide more limited spatial information; therefore, a combination of both is desirable, preferably supplemented by simulations. Current efforts at research and clinical centres continue to improve non-invasive thermometry methods and the reliability of treatment planning and control software. Due to the challenges in measuring temperature across the non-stationary bladder wall and surrounding tissues, more research is needed to increase our knowledge about the penetration depth and typical heating pattern of the various hyperthermia devices, in order to further improve treatments. The ability to better determine the delivered thermal dose will enable clinicians to investigate the optimal treatment parameters, and consequentially, to give better controlled, thus even more reliable and effective, thermal treatments

    Dual-modality thermoacoustic and photoacoustic imaging

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    Diagnosis of early breast cancer is the key to survival. The combined contrasts from thermoacoustic and photoacoustic tomography: TAT and PAT) can potentially predict early stage breast cancer. We have designed and engineered a breast imaging system integrating both thermoacoustic and photoacoustic imaging techniques to achieve dual-contrast: microwave and light absorption), non-ionizing, low-cost, high-resolution, three-dimensional breast imaging. We have also developed a novel concept of using a negative acoustic lens to increase the acceptance angle of an unfocused large-area ultrasonic transducer: detector), leading to more than twofold improvement of the tangential resolution in both TAT and PAT when the object is far from the scanning center. A contrast agent could be greatly beneficial for early cancer diagnosis using TAT/PAT, because the early stage intrinsic contrast can be low. We have developed a carbon nanotube-based contrast agent for both TAT and PAT. In comparison with deionized water, single-walled carbon nanotubes: SWNTs) exhibited more than twofold signal enhancement for TAT at 3 GHz, and in comparison with blood, they exhibited more than sixfold signal enhancement for PAT at 1064 nm wavelength. Using PAT in conjunction with an intradermal injection of SWNTs, we also showed the feasibility of noninvasive in vivo sentinel lymph node imaging in a rat model. We have also developed and demonstrated molecular photoacoustic imaging using unique soft-type colloidal gold nanobeacons: GNBs) in the near-infrared region. GNBs represent a novel class of stable, colloidal gold nanoparticles, incorporating small metallic gold nanoparticles that can clear from the body when the particles are metabolically disrupted. We have also imaged the sentinel lymph node using different sizes of GNBs, showing that size plays an important role in their in vivo behavior and uptake to the lymph nodes. In addition to providing diagnostic imaging, TAT and PAT can be used in therapy for real-time temperature monitoring with high spatial resolution and high temperature sensitivity, which are both needed for safe and efficient thermotherapy. Using a tissue phantom, these noninvasive methods have been demonstrated to have a high temperature sensitivity of 0.15 0C at 2 s temporal resolution: 20 signal averages)
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