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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Subharmonic Imaging of Polymer-Shelled Contrast Agents / Subharmonisk avbildning av polymera kontrastmedel

Sigmundsson, Rúnar January 2018 (has links)
The harmonic generation due to the nonlinear behavior of Ultrasound Contrast Agents (UCAs) must be exploited for improved efficiency when imaging vascular targets in the neighborhood of highly echogenic tissue. One may even further improve the efficiency by focusing on the subharmonic generation of the UCAs, which is an even more exclusive property than the generation of higher harmonics, for improved Contrast-to-Tissue ratio (CTR). The aim of this work was first, the design of a set-up for nonlinear imaging of Poly-Vinyl Alcohol (PVA) based UCAs on The Verasonics Research System with special focus on nondestructive Subharmonic Imaging. The second part of the work addressed the evaluation of the subharmonic response provided by the agents in the developed setup. Six different imaging techniques were developed. These were Fundamental B-mode imaging (FB), Pulse Inversion imaging (PI), and a Contrast Pulse Sequence based on three pulses (CPS3), with and without a focus on the subharmonic component by the implementation of a Linear Bandpass Filter (LBF). Experiments were performed on a tissue mimicking flow phantom and the performance of the agents for each technique was determined in terms of CTR and CNR. The PVA agents provided a backscattering enhancement of the order of 23 dB through FB imaging. However, the performance of the FB technique was unsatisfactory in terms of CTR. The CPS3 sequence performed best of the six techniques with an improvement of 14 dB and 13 dB in CTR and CNR, respectively, compared with the FB technique. Combining the LBF around the subharmonic component with the multi-pulse techniques of PI and CPS3 resulted in a degraded CTR performance due to significant amount of signals from tissue around the subharmonic component and insufficient subharmonic detection from the PVA agents.

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