Trade-offs between the axial resolution and the signal-to-noise ratio in elastography. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Elastography involves tracking the ultrasonic A-mode signals before and after mechanical compression of tissue to form a computed image of the local strains undergone by various tissue components. The quality of the strain estimates in elastography is typically quantified using factors such as the elastographic SNR (SNR(e)), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR(e)), and the spatial resolution. These quality factors depend on the mechanical parameters (such as the applied strain and the boundary conditions), the acoustic parameters (such as the sonographic SNR, the center frequency, and the bandwidth), and the signal-processing parameters (such as the window length and the window separation). Theoretical developments in elastography have established functional relationships between the SNR(e) and CNR(e) and these parameters. Similarly, simulations have established empirical relationships between the axial resolution and the acoustic and signal-processing parameters. We find that a trade-off exists between the achievable SNR(e) (CNR(e)) and the axial resolution in elastography and that the trade-off occurs only with respect to the signal-processing parameters. Theoretical work on the spatial resolution accompanied with simulations and experiments were used to confirm such an observation. The trade-off between the SNR(e) (CNR(e)) and the resolution was found to be nonlinear, with large improvements in the SNR(e) being possible at the expense of small reductions in the axial resolution. All the quality factors improve with the acoustic parameters, which suggests the preferred use of transducers with high absolute bandwidths and center frequencies.

published proceedings

  • Ultrasound Med Biol

altmetric score

  • 3

author list (cited authors)

  • Srinivasan, S., Righetti, R., & Ophir, J.

citation count

  • 72

complete list of authors

  • Srinivasan, S||Righetti, R||Ophir, J

publication date

  • January 2003