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In vitro experiment using porcine artery for evaluation of ultrasonic measurement of arterial luminal surface profile

Nagai, Yoshifumi ; Cinthio, Magnus LU ; Hasegawa, Hideyuki ; Bengtsson, Martin LU ; Evander, Mikael LU ; Albinsson, John LU and Kanai, Hiroshi (2014) In Journal of Medical Ultrasonics 41(4). p.431-437
Abstract
Introduction In early-stage atherosclerosis, the luminal surface of the arterial wall becomes rough because of detachment of endothelial cells and degeneration of the internal elastic layer. Therefore, it would be useful if minute luminal surface roughness of the carotid arterial wall, which occurs in the early stage of atherosclerosis, could be measured noninvasively with ultrasound. The injured luminal surface is believed to have roughness of a few hundred micrometers. However, in conventional ultrasonography, the axial resolution of a B-mode image depends on the ultrasonic wavelength (150 mu m at ultrasonic center frequency of 10 MHz) because a B-mode image is constructed using the amplitude of the RF echo signal. Therefore, such... (More)
Introduction In early-stage atherosclerosis, the luminal surface of the arterial wall becomes rough because of detachment of endothelial cells and degeneration of the internal elastic layer. Therefore, it would be useful if minute luminal surface roughness of the carotid arterial wall, which occurs in the early stage of atherosclerosis, could be measured noninvasively with ultrasound. The injured luminal surface is believed to have roughness of a few hundred micrometers. However, in conventional ultrasonography, the axial resolution of a B-mode image depends on the ultrasonic wavelength (150 mu m at ultrasonic center frequency of 10 MHz) because a B-mode image is constructed using the amplitude of the RF echo signal. Therefore, such surface roughness cannot be measured accurately from a conventional B-mode image. Recently, we successfully measured such minute surface profile transcutaneously using the phase shift of an ultrasonic echo from the carotid arterial wall. In our previous validation experiment, a silicone phantom with minute surface roughness of 10-20 mu m was measured. However, the feasibility of our proposed method has never been validated using biological tissues. Materials and methods In the present study, luminal surface roughness of a porcine artery was measured and the result was evaluated by comparing it with the result measured using a stylus profilometer. Results and conclusion The root mean squared difference between the surface roughness measured by ultrasound and the stylus profilometer was 10.5 mu m. This result proves that our proposed method can be used to measure minute surface roughness of biological tissue. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Luminal surface of arterial wall, Roughness, Porcine artery, Atherosclerosis
in
Journal of Medical Ultrasonics
volume
41
issue
4
pages
431 - 437
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • wos:000343648200004
  • scopus:84919461310
  • pmid:27278023
ISSN
1346-4523
DOI
10.1007/s10396-014-0541-0
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a62417ea-c5f6-4913-ba3e-7865982f0e7d (old id 4783740)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:14:35
date last changed
2022-01-26 06:29:56
@article{a62417ea-c5f6-4913-ba3e-7865982f0e7d,
  abstract     = {{Introduction In early-stage atherosclerosis, the luminal surface of the arterial wall becomes rough because of detachment of endothelial cells and degeneration of the internal elastic layer. Therefore, it would be useful if minute luminal surface roughness of the carotid arterial wall, which occurs in the early stage of atherosclerosis, could be measured noninvasively with ultrasound. The injured luminal surface is believed to have roughness of a few hundred micrometers. However, in conventional ultrasonography, the axial resolution of a B-mode image depends on the ultrasonic wavelength (150 mu m at ultrasonic center frequency of 10 MHz) because a B-mode image is constructed using the amplitude of the RF echo signal. Therefore, such surface roughness cannot be measured accurately from a conventional B-mode image. Recently, we successfully measured such minute surface profile transcutaneously using the phase shift of an ultrasonic echo from the carotid arterial wall. In our previous validation experiment, a silicone phantom with minute surface roughness of 10-20 mu m was measured. However, the feasibility of our proposed method has never been validated using biological tissues. Materials and methods In the present study, luminal surface roughness of a porcine artery was measured and the result was evaluated by comparing it with the result measured using a stylus profilometer. Results and conclusion The root mean squared difference between the surface roughness measured by ultrasound and the stylus profilometer was 10.5 mu m. This result proves that our proposed method can be used to measure minute surface roughness of biological tissue.}},
  author       = {{Nagai, Yoshifumi and Cinthio, Magnus and Hasegawa, Hideyuki and Bengtsson, Martin and Evander, Mikael and Albinsson, John and Kanai, Hiroshi}},
  issn         = {{1346-4523}},
  keywords     = {{Luminal surface of arterial wall; Roughness; Porcine artery; Atherosclerosis}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{431--437}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Journal of Medical Ultrasonics}},
  title        = {{In vitro experiment using porcine artery for evaluation of ultrasonic measurement of arterial luminal surface profile}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10396-014-0541-0}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s10396-014-0541-0}},
  volume       = {{41}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}