Effect of Skull Porous Trabecular Structure on Transcranial Ultrasound Imaging in the Presence of Elastic Wave Mode Conversion at Varying Incidence Angle.

2021 
Abstract With the advancement of aberration correction techniques, transcranial ultrasound imaging has exhibited great potential in applications such as imaging neurological function and guiding therapeutic ultrasound. However, the feasibility of transcranial imaging varies among individuals because of the differences in skull acoustic properties. To better understand the fundamental mechanisms underlying the variation in imaging performance, the effect of the structure of the porous trabecular bone on transcranial imaging performance (i.e., target localization errors and resolution) was investigated for the first time through the use of elastic wave simulations and experiments. Simulation studies using high-resolution computed tomography data from ex vivo skull samples revealed that imaging at large incidence angles reduced the target localization error for skulls having low porosity; however, as skull porosity increased, large angles of incidence resulted in degradation of resolution and increased target localization errors. Experimental results indicate that imaging at normal incidence introduced a localization error of 1.85 ± 0.10 mm, while imaging at a large incidence angle (40°) resulted in an increased localization error of 6.54 ± 1.33 mm and caused a single point target to no longer appear as a single, coherent target in the resulting image, which is consistent with simulation results. This first investigation of the effects of skull microstructure on transcranial ultrasound imaging indicates that imaging performance is highly dependent on the porosity of the skull, particularly at non-normal angles of incidence.
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