Experimental investigation of computed tomography sound velocity reconstruction using incomplete data.

An approach for reconstructing the sound velocity distribution in the breast was previously proposed and verified by simulations, and the present study investigated the approach experimentally. The experimental setup comprised a 5-MHz, 128-channel linear array, a programmable digital array system, a phantom containing objects with differing physical properties, and a computer. The array system was used to collect channel data for simultaneous B-mode image formation and limited-angle tomographic sound velocity reconstruction. The phantom was constructed from materials mimicking the following tissues in the breast: glandular tissue, fat, cysts, high-attenuation tumors, and irregular tumors. The sound velocities in these materials matched those in the corresponding real tissues. The imaging setup is similar to that of x-ray mammography, in which a linear array is placed at the top of the breast and a metal plate is placed at the bottom for reflecting sound waves. Thus, both B-mode images and the sound velocity distribution can be acquired using the same setup. An algorithm based on a convex programming formulation was used to reconstruct the sound velocity images. By scanning the phantom at different positions, nine cases were evaluated. In each of the nine cases, the image object comprised a background (glandular tissue) and one or three regions of interest (fat, tumor, or cyst). The sound velocity was accurately estimated in the nine cases evaluated, with sound velocity errors being less than 5 m/s in 8 of 11 regions of interest. Thus, obtaining the sound velocity distribution is feasible with a B-mode imaging setup using linear arrays. Knowledge of the sound velocity distribution in the breast can be used to complement B-mode imaging and to enhance the detection of breast cancer.

[1]  F. Dunn,et al.  Comprehensive compilation of empirical ultrasonic properties of mammalian tissues. , 1978, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[2]  Patrick L. Combettes,et al.  Hard-constrained inconsistent signal feasibility problems , 1999, IEEE Trans. Signal Process..

[3]  A. Stavros,et al.  Solid breast nodules: use of sonography to distinguish between benign and malignant lesions. , 1995, Radiology.

[4]  Elena Biagi,et al.  A new combined open research platform for ultrasound radio frequency signal processing , 2003, IEEE Symposium on Ultrasonics, 2003.

[5]  S. D. Silverstein,et al.  Optimum displacement for compound image generation in medical ultrasound , 1988, IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control.

[6]  Avinash C. Kak,et al.  Principles of computerized tomographic imaging , 2001, Classics in applied mathematics.

[7]  Sheng-Wen Huang,et al.  Computed tomography sound velocity reconstruction using incomplete data. , 2004, IEEE transactions on ultrasonics, ferroelectrics, and frequency control.

[8]  B.D. Steinberg,et al.  Wavefront amplitude distortion and image sidelobe levels. II. In vivo experiments , 1993, IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control.

[9]  Gregg E. Trahey,et al.  Wavefront distortion measurements in the human breast , 1997, 1997 IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium Proceedings. An International Symposium (Cat. No.97CH36118).

[10]  Dagmar Leucht,et al.  Teaching Atlas of Breast Ultrasound , 1992 .

[11]  K. C. Tam,et al.  Incomplete-data CT image reconstructions in industrial applications , 1990 .

[12]  Henry Stark,et al.  Image recovery: Theory and application , 1987 .

[13]  R C Waag,et al.  Measurement and correction of ultrasonic pulse distortion produced by the human breast. , 1995, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[14]  K. Han,et al.  Breast lesions on sonograms: computer-aided diagnosis with nearly setting-independent features and artificial neural networks. , 2003, Radiology.

[15]  Helmut Ermert,et al.  Limited angle ultrasonic transmission tomography of the compressed female breast , 1998, 1998 IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium. Proceedings (Cat. No. 98CH36102).

[16]  H. Ermert,et al.  A modified time-of-flight tomography concept for ultrasonic breast imaging , 1996, 1996 IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium. Proceedings.

[17]  H. Stark,et al.  A comparative study of three reconstruction methods for a limited-view computer tomography problem. , 1989, IEEE transactions on medical imaging.