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Blood Flow Imaging with Ultrafast Doppler.

Authors: Baranger J, Mertens L, Villemain O

The pulsed-Doppler effect is the main technique used in clinical echography to assess blood flow. Applied with conventional focused ultrasound Doppler modes, it has several limits. Firstly, a finely tuned signal filtering operation is needed to distinguish blood flows from surrounding moving tissues. Secondly, the operator must choose between localizing the blood flows or quantifying them. In the last two decades, ultrasound imaging has undergone a paradigm shift with the emergence of ultrafast ultrasound using unfocused waves. In addition to a hundredfold increase in framerate (up to 10000 Hz), this new technique also breaks the conventional quantification/localization trade-off, offering a complete blood flow mapping of the field of view and a simultaneous access to fine velocities measurements at the single-pixel level (down to 50 µm). This data continuity in both spatial and temporal dimensions strongly improves the tissue/blood filtering process, which results in an increase sensitivity to small blood flow velocities (down to 1 mm/s). In this method paper, we aim to introduce the concept of ultrafast Doppler as well as its main parameters. Firstly, we summarize the physical principles of unfocused wave imaging. Then, we present the Doppler signal processing main steps. Particularly, we explain the practical implementation of the critical tissue/blood flow separation algorithms and on the extraction of velocities from these filtered data. This theoretical description is supplemented by in vitro experiences. A tissue phantom embedding a canal with flowing blood-mimicking fluid is imaged with a research programmable ultrasound system. A blood flow image is obtained and the flow characteristics are displayed for several pixels in the canal. Finally, a review of in vivo applications is proposed, showing examples in several organs such as carotids, kidney, thyroid, brain and heart.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To develop and evaluate ultrafast Doppler imaging techniques for visualizing and measuring blood flow.
Animal model / Human subject Not specified in the provided text
Disease model Not specified
MRI or image guidance method Not specified in the provided text.
Targeted brain region(s) Not Specified
Target coordinates Not provided
Cargo name and characteristics None reported in the provided text.
Route of administration Not specified

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Ultrafast Doppler enables high-resolution, real-time imaging of blood flow dynamics in biological tissues.
Duration of biological effect not reported
Safety-related matter No safety concerns or adverse effects are mentioned in the provided paper text.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Not specified in provided text.
FUS Frequency Not specified
FUS Intensity Not reported in provided text
FUS Mode not specified
Pulse duration not stated
Duration of a single FUS session Not stated in the provided text
Focal Characteristics Not specified
Treatment frequency Not reported

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