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New Metric to Evaluate Cardiac Anisotropic Mechanics by Directional High-Frequency Ultrasound-Based Transverse Wave Elastography

Title
New Metric to Evaluate Cardiac Anisotropic Mechanics by Directional High-Frequency Ultrasound-Based Transverse Wave Elastography
Author(s)
Lee, SeungyeopEun, Lucy YoungminHwang, Jae YounKim, Jung-SunEun, Yongsoon
Issued Date
2023-07
Citation
IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, v.70, no.7, pp.653 - 667
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Cardiac mechanical propertiesheart diseasehigh-frequency ultrasoundtransverse wave elastographyultrasound imaging
Keywords
MYOCARDIAL STIFFNESSQUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENTDOXORUBICINCARDIOMYOPATHYFORCE
ISSN
0885-3010
Abstract
The evaluation of cardiac anisotropic mechanics is important in the diagnosis of heart disease. However, other representative ultrasound imaging-based metrics, which are capable of quantitatively evaluating anisotropic cardiac mechanics, are insufficient for accurately diagnosing heart disease due to the influence of viscosity and geometry of cardiac tissues. In this study, we propose a new ultrasound imaging-based metric, maximum cosine similarity, for quantifying anisotropic mechanics of cardiac tissues by evaluating the periodicity of the transverse wave speeds depending on the measurement directions using ultrasound imaging. We developed a high-frequency ultrasound-based directional transverse wave imaging system to measure the transverse wave speed in multiple directions. The ultrasound imaging-based metric was validated by performing experiments on forty rats randomly assigned to four groups; three doxorubicin treatment groups received 10 mg/kg, 15 mg/kg, or 20 mg/kg doxorubicin, while the control group received 0.2 ml/kg saline. In each heart sample, the developed ultrasound imaging system allowed measuring transverse wave speeds in multiple directions, and the new metric was then calculated from 3D ultrasound transverse wave images to evaluate the degree of anisotropic mechanics of the heart sample. The results of the metric were compared with histopathological changes for validation. A decrease in the maximum cosine similarity value was observed in the doxorubicin treatment groups, with the degree of decrease depending on the dose. These results are consistent with the histopathological features, suggesting that our ultrasound imaging-based metric can quantify the anisotropic mechanics of cardiac tissues and potentially be used for the early diagnosis of heart disease. © 2023 IEEE
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/46087
DOI
10.1109/TUFFC.2023.3279284
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Related Researcher
  • 황재윤 Hwang, Jae Youn
  • Research Interests Multimodal Imaging; High-Frequency Ultrasound Microbeam; Ultrasound Imaging and Analysis; 스마트 헬스케어; Biomedical optical system
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Appears in Collections:
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science DSC Lab(Dynamic Systems and Control Laboratory) 1. Journal Articles
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science MBIS(Multimodal Biomedical Imaging and System) Laboratory 1. Journal Articles

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