Paper
24 February 2017 High frequency ultrasound in-plane registration of deformable finger vessels
Chengqian Che, Jihang Wang, Vijay S. Gorantla, John Galeotti
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Ultrasound imaging is widely used in clinical imaging because it is non-invasive, real-time, and inexpensive. Due to the freehand nature of clinical ultrasound, analysis of an image sequence often requires registration between the images. Of the previously developed mono-modality ultrasound registration frameworks, only few were designed to register small anatomical structures. Monitoring of small finger vessels, in particular, is essential for the treatment of vascular diseases such as Raynaud’s Disease. High frequency ultrasound (HFUS) can now image smaller anatomic details down to 30 microns within the vessels, but no work has been done to date on such small-scale ultrasound registration. Due to the complex internal finger structure and increased noise of HFUS, it is difficult to register 2D images of finger vascular tissue, especially under deformation. We studied a variety of similarity measurements with different pre-processing techniques to find which registration similarity metrics were best suited for HFUS vessel tracking. The overall best performance was obtained with a normalized correlation metric coupled with HFUS downsampling and a one-plus-one evolutionary optimizer, yielding a mean registration error of 0.05 mm. We also used HFUS to study how finger tissue deforms under an ultrasound transducer, comparing internal motion vs. transducer motion. Improving HFUS registration and tissue modeling may lead to new research and improved treatments for peripheral vascular disorders.
© (2017) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chengqian Che, Jihang Wang, Vijay S. Gorantla, and John Galeotti "High frequency ultrasound in-plane registration of deformable finger vessels", Proc. SPIE 10133, Medical Imaging 2017: Image Processing, 101332L (24 February 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2254708
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KEYWORDS
Image registration

Ultrasonography

Transducers

Tissues

Image analysis

Image restoration

Image processing

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