A Method for in Vitro Mapping of Ultrasonic Speed and Density in Breast Tissue

A method has been developed for mapping density and ultrasonic speed in 1 mm thick slices of soft tissue with a resolution of about 1 mm. Tests using phantom sections have verified the accuracy and resolution of the ultrasonic speed maps. The method has been applied to breast tissues of three patients including tumors and surrounding tissue. Fixing a specimen in 5% formaldehyde did not change the degree of local variation in ultrasonic speeds, and raised mean speeds by less than 0.8%. The densities with fixing remained almost unchanged at low tissue densities (0.93 g/cm3), but rose 1.5% for higher tissue density (greater than 1.00 g/cm3).

[1]  F. Dunn,et al.  Compilation of empirical ultrasonic properties of mammalian tissues. II. , 1980, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[2]  E L Madsen,et al.  Oil-in-gelatin dispersions for use as ultrasonically tissue-mimicking materials. , 1982, Ultrasound in medicine & biology.

[3]  F. Foster,et al.  The Ultrasound Macroscope: Initial Studies of Breast Tissue , 1984 .

[4]  E. C. Gregg,et al.  Attenuation of monoenergetic gamma rays in tissues. , 1975, The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy, and nuclear medicine.

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

[6]  James F. Greenleaf,et al.  CLINICAL IMAGING WITH TRANSMISSIVE ULTRASONIC COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY , 1981 .