Ultrasound-Based Estimation of Fibre-Directional Strain: A Simulation Study

Louis S. Fixsen (Corresponding author), Richard G.P. Lopata

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Samenvatting

Left ventricular (LV) strains are typically represented with respect to the imaging axes. Contraction within the myocardium occurs along myofibres, which vary in orientation. Therefore, a mismatch exists between the direction in which strain is calculated and that in which contraction occurs. In this study, ultrasound-based fibre orientation and 3-D strain estimation were combined to calculate the fibre-directional strain. Three-dimensional ultrasound volumes were created by simulating simple geometrical phantoms and a phantom based on a finite-element (FE) model of LV mechanics. Fibre-like structures were embedded within tissue-mimicking scatterers. Strains were applied to the numerical phantom, whereas the FE phantom was deformed based on the LV model. Fibre orientation was accurately estimated for both phantoms. There was poor agreement in axial and elevational strains (root mean square error = 29.9% and 12.3%), but good agreement in lateral and fibre-directional strains (root mean square error = 6.4% and 5.9% respectively), which aligned in the midwall. Simplifications to reduce computational complexity caused poor axial and elevational strain estimation. However, calculation of fibre-directional strain from single-modality ultrasound volumes was successful. Further studies, in ex vivo setups because of the fundamental limitations of currently available transducers, are needed to verify real-world performance of the method.

Originele taal-2Engels
Pagina's (van-tot)1785-1796
Aantal pagina's12
TijdschriftUltrasound in Medicine and Biology
Volume48
Nummer van het tijdschrift9
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - 1 sep. 2022

Bibliografische nota

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors

Financiering

L.S.F. is supported by the European Commission through the H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie European Training Network H2020-MSCA-ITN-2014 VPH-CaSE, www.vph-case.eu , GA No. 642612.

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