: Non-invasive evaluations of muscle elasticity and tone are crucial in musculoskeletal medicine. Shear wave elastography (SWE) provides quantitative assessments of muscle elasticity, whereas train-of-four (TOF) monitoring measures muscle tone during neuromuscular blockades. This study investigated the relationship between muscle elasticity and tone during anesthesia induction using continuous SWE (C-SWE) and TOF monitoring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study addresses a crucial necessity in the field of noninvasive liver fibrosis diagnosis by introducing the concept of continuous shear wave elastography (C-SWE), utilizing an external vibration source and color Doppler imaging. However, an application of C-SWE to assess liver elasticity, a deep region within the human body, arises an issue of signal instability in the obtained data. To tackle this challenge, this work proposes a method involving the acquisition of multiple frames of datasets, which are subsequently compressed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Continuous shear wave elastography (C-SWE) can be expected to be applied to portable muscle elasticity diagnosis. To establish diagnostic technology, it will be necessary to improve measurement techniques and quantitative measurement accuracy.
Methods: In this study, we investigated two screen scores: the quality index (Q-index), which determines whether the intensity of a power Doppler image is appropriate, and the shear wave propagation direction index (SWDI), which determines the uniformity of shear wave propagation.
This paper proposes a method to determine the elasticity of the lung parenchyma from the B-line Doppler signal observed using continuous shear wave elastography, which uses a small vibrator placed on the tissue surface to propagate continuous shear waves with a vibration frequency of approximately 100 Hz. Since the B-line is generated by multiple reflections in fluid-storing alveoli near the lung surface, the ultrasonic multiple-reflection signal from the B-line is affected by the Doppler shift due to shear waves propagating in the lung parenchyma. When multiple B-lines are observed, the propagation velocity can be estimated by measuring the difference in propagation time between the B-lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control
May 2019
Temporal- and spatial-resolved observations of microbubble cavitation generated through high-intensity ultrasound irradiation are key in improving both the efficiency and efficacy of ultrasound-assisted drug delivery systems. A method of measuring bubble cavitation applying an image-reconstruction technique of back-propagation of an acoustic cavitation emission (ACE) signal is proposed. A high-intensity focused ultrasound wave (pump wave) irradiates the bubble synchronously using ultrasound recording equipment to acquire the timing of the RF signal, which is produced when the bubble radiates a secondary wave during bubble cavitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control
February 2017
Shear wave elastography is a distinctive method to access the viscoelastic characteristic of the soft tissue that is difficult to obtain by other imaging modalities. This paper proposes a novel shear wave elastography [color Doppler shear wave imaging (CD SWI)] for breast tissue. Continuous shear wave is produced by a small lightweight actuator, which is attached to the tissue surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
November 2015
In this paper, control of a thin catheter bending by using acoustic radiation force was carried out to develop precise and noninvasive surgery in small blood vessel. First, it was elucidated that the acting force to a thin catheter made from perfluoroalkoxy (PFA) copolymer could be obtained from the cantilever equation in the effective range, where the displacement of the catheter divided by the cube of the length of the catheter was less than 1.0×10(-5) mm(-2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
September 2015
We have newly developed a 2D array transducer to control the behavior of microbubbles, which is different from that for HIFU therapy, to emit continuous wave by designing acoustic field including multiple focal points. In the experiment using a straight path model, we have confirmed that higher concentration of acoustic energy does not result more aggregation. We also have confirmed the trapped areas of microbubbles are located not in the peak of the distribution of sound pressure, but in the middle range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
September 2015
We have previously reported our attempt to propel microbbles in flow by a primary Bjerknes force, which is a physical phenomenon where an acoustic wave pushes an obstacle along its direction of propagation. However, when ultrasound was emitted from surface of the body, controlling bubbles in against flow was needed. It is unpractical to use multiple transducers to produce the same number of focal points because single element transducer cannot produce more than two focal points.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
August 2013
Microbubbles form their aggregations between the neighboring microbubbles by the effect of secondary Bjerknes force under ultrasound exposure. However, because of the difficulty to reproduce a capillary-mimicking artificial blood vessel, the behavior of aggregations in a capillary has not been predicted. Thus we prepared artificial blood vessels including a capillary model, which was made of poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) by grayscale lithography method, with minimum diameter of the path of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
June 2012
We have previously reported our attempts to control microbubbles (microcapsules) behavior in flow by primary Bjerknes force to increase the local concentration of the bubbles at a diseased part. However, there was a limitation in efficiency to propel bubbles of μm-order size. Thus we consider that forming aggregates of bubbles is effective to be propelled before entering into an ultrasound field by making use of secondary Bjerknes force under continuous ultrasound exposure.
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