21 research outputs found
Three-dimensional echocardiographic analysis of left ventricular function during hemodialysis
Assessment of left ventricular function by three-dimensional echocardiography.
Accurate determination of LV volume, ejection fraction and segmental wall
motion abnormalities is important for clinical decision-making and
follow-up assessment. Currently, echocardiography is the most common used
method to obtain this information. Three-dimensional echocardiography has
shown to be an accurate and reproducible method for LV quantitation,
mainly by avoiding the use of geometric assumptions. In this review, we
describe various methods to acquire a 3D-dataset for LV volume and wall
motion analysis, including their advantages and limitations. We provide an
overview of studies comparing LV volume and function measurement by
various gated and real-time methods of acquisition compared to magnetic
resonance imaging. New technical improvements, such as automated
endocardial border detection and contrast enhancement, will make accurate
on-line assessment with little operator interaction possible in the near
future
Comparison of fundamental, second harmonic, and superharmonic imaging: A simulation study
In medical ultrasound, fundamental imaging (FI) uses the reflected echoes from the same spectral band as that of the emitted pulse. The transmission frequency determines the trade-off between penetration depth and spatial resolution. Tissue harmonic imaging (THI) employs the second harmonic of the emitted frequency band to construct images. Recently, superharmonic imaging (SHI) has been introduced, which uses the third to the fifth (super) harmonics. The harmonic level is determined by two competing phenomena: nonlinear propagation and frequency dependent attenuation. Thus, the transmission frequency yielding the optimal trade-off between the spatial resolution and the penetration depth differs for THI and SHI. This paper quantitatively compares the concepts of fundamental, second harmonic, and superharmonic echocardiography at their optimal transmission frequencies. Forward propagation is modeled using a 3D-KZK implementation and the iterative nonlinear contrast source (INCS) method. Backpropagation is assumed to be linear. Results show that the fundamental lateral beamwidth is the narrowest at focus, while the superharmonic one is narrower outside the focus. The lateral superharmonic roll-off exceeds the fundamental and second harmonic roll-off. Also, the axial resolution of SHI exceeds that of FI and THI. The far-field pulse-echo superharmonic pressure is lower than that of the fundamental and second harmonic. SHI appears suited for echocardiography and is expected to improve its image quality at the cost of a slight reduction in depth-of-field. (C) 2011 Acoustical Society of America. [DOI: 10.1121/1.3643815