Objective: Surveillance techniques for arteriovenous fistulae are required to maintain functional vascular access, with two-dimensional duplex ultrasound the most widely used imaging modality. This paper presents a surveillance method for an arteriovenous fistula using a freehand three-dimensional (3-D) ultrasound system. A patient-case study highlights the applicability in a clinical environment.
Methods: The freehand ultrasound system uses optical tracking to determine the vascular probe location, and as the probe is swept down a patient's arm, each B-mode slice is spatially arranged to be post-processed as a volume. The volume is segmented to obtain the 3-D vasculature for high detail analysis.
Results: The results follow a patient with stenosis, undergoing surgery to have a stent placement. A surveillance scan was taken pre-surgery, postsurgery, and at a two-month follow-up. Vasculature changes are quantified using detailed analysis, and the benefits of using 3-D imaging are shown through 3-D printing and visualization.
Conclusion And Significance: Non-invasive 3-D surveillance of arteriovenous fistulae is possible, and a patient-specific geometry was created using ultrasound and optical tracking. Access to this non-invasive 3-D surveillance technique will enable future studies to determine patient-specific remodeling behavior, in terms of geometry and hemodynamics over time.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TBME.2017.2782781 | DOI Listing |
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