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Quantification of Ultrasound Correlation‐Based Flow Velocity Mapping and Edge Velocity Gradient Measurement
Authors:Dae Woo Park PhD  Grant H Kruger PhD  Jonathan M Rubin MD  PhD  James Hamilton PhD  Paul Gottschalk PhD  Robert E Dodde PhD  Albert J Shih PhD  William F Weitzel MD
Institution:1. Department of Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania USA;2. Departments of Mechanical Engineering and Anesthesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan USA;3. Department of Radiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan USA;4. Epsilon Imaging, Inc, Ann Arbor, Michigan USA;5. Department Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan USA;6. Department of Internal Medicine, Veterans Administration Hospital and University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan USA
Abstract:This study investigated the use of ultrasound speckle decorrelation‐ and correlation‐based lateral speckle‐tracking methods for transverse and longitudinal blood velocity profile measurement, respectively. By studying the blood velocity gradient at the vessel wall, vascular wall shear stress, which is important in vascular physiology as well as the pathophysiologic mechanisms of vascular diseases, can be obtained. Decorrelation‐based blood velocity profile measurement transverse to the flow direction is a novel approach, which provides advantages for vascular wall shear stress measurement over longitudinal blood velocity measurement methods. Blood flow velocity profiles are obtained from measurements of frame‐to‐frame decorrelation. In this research, both decorrelation and lateral speckle‐tracking flow estimation methods were compared with Poiseuille theory over physiologic flows ranging from 50 to 1000 mm/s. The decorrelation flow velocity measurement method demonstrated more accurate prediction of the flow velocity gradient at the wall edge than the correlation‐based lateral speckle‐tracking method. The novelty of this study is that speckle decorrelation‐based flow velocity measurements determine the blood velocity across a vessel. In addition, speckle decor‐relation‐based flow velocity measurements have higher axial spatial resolution than Doppler ultrasound measurements to enable more accurate measurement of blood velocity near a vessel wall and determine the physiologically important wall shear.
Keywords:blood flow  decorrelation  speckle tracking  ultrasound
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