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dc.contributor.author Chandrasekaran, S
dc.contributor.author Tripathi, BB
dc.contributor.author Espíndola, D
dc.contributor.author Pinton, GF
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-17T15:54:58Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-17T15:54:58Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.uoh.cl/handle/611/675
dc.description.abstract Traumatic brain injury (TBI) studies on the living human brain are experimentally infeasible due to ethical reasons and the elastic properties of the brain degrade rapidly postmortem. We present a simulation approach thatmodels ultrasound propagation in the human brain, while it is moving due to the complex shear shock wave deformation froma traumatic impact. Finite difference simulations can model ultrasound propagation in complex media such as human tissue. Recently, we have shown that the fullwave finite difference approach can also be used to represent displacements that are much smaller than the grid size, such as the motion encountered in shear wave propagation from ultrasound elastography. However, this subresolution displacement model, called impedance flow, was only implemented and validated for acoustical media composed of randomly distributed scatterers. Herein, we propose a generalization of the impedance flow method that describes the continuous subresolution motion of structured acoustical maps, and in particular of acoustical maps of the human brain. It is shown that the average error in simulating subresolution displacements using impedance flow is small when compared to the acoustical wavelength (lambda/1702). The method is then applied to acoustical maps of the human brain with a motion that is imposed by the propagation of a shear shock wave. This motion is determined numerically with a custom piecewise parabolic method that is calibrated to ex vivo observations of shear shocks in the porcine brain. Then the fullwave simulation tool is used to model transmit-receive imaging sequences based on an L7-4 imaging transducer. The simulated radio frequency data are beamformed using a conventional delay-and-sum method and a normalized cross-correlationmethod designed for shockwave tracking is used to determine the tissue motion. This overall process is an in silico reproduction of the experiments that were previously performed to observe shear shock waves in fresh porcine brain. It is shown that the proposed generalized impedance flow method accurately captures the shear wave motion in terms of the wave profile, shock front characteristics, odd harmonic spectrum generation, and acceleration at the shear shock front. We expect that this approach will lead to improvements in image sequence design that takes into account the aberration and multiple reflections from the brain and in the design of tracking algorithms that can more accurately capture the complex brain motion that occurs during a traumatic impact. These methods of modeling ultrasound propagation in moving media can also be applied to other displacements, such as those generated by shear wave elastography or blood flow.
dc.description.sponsorship National Institute of Health(United States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA)
dc.relation.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TUFFC.2020.3022567
dc.subject Biomedical acoustics
dc.subject biomedical imaging
dc.subject finite difference simulations
dc.subject numerical simulation
dc.subject shear shock waves
dc.subject traumatic brain injury (TBI)
dc.title Modeling Ultrasound Propagation in the Moving Brain: Applications to Shear Shock Waves and Traumatic Brain Injury
dc.type Artículo
uoh.revista IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ULTRASONICS FERROELECTRICS AND FREQUENCY CONTROL
dc.identifier.doi 10.1109/TUFFC.2020.3022567
dc.citation.volume 68
dc.citation.issue 1
dc.identifier.orcid Espindola, David/0000-0001-6675-9560
dc.identifier.orcid Tripathi, Bharat/0000-0001-6757-0735
uoh.indizacion Web of Science


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