Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Ultrasound Imaging" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Comprehensive review of reinforcement learning for medical ultrasound imaging Elmekki H; Islam S; Alagha A; Sami H; Spilkin A; Zakeri E; Zanuttini AM; Bentahar J; Kadem L; Xie WF; Pibarot P; Mizouni R; Otrok H; Singh S; Mourad A; 40567264
ENCS
2 CACTUS: An open dataset and framework for automated Cardiac Assessment and Classification of Ultrasound images using deep transfer learning Elmekki H; Alagha A; Sami H; Spilkin A; Zanuttini AM; Zakeri E; Bentahar J; Kadem L; Xie WF; Pibarot P; Mizouni R; Otrok H; Singh S; Mourad A; 40107020
ENCS
3 The effect of micro-vessel viscosity on the resonance response of a two-microbubble system Yusefi H; Helfield B; 39705920
BIOLOGY
4 Subharmonic resonance of phospholipid coated ultrasound contrast agent microbubbles Yusefi H; Helfield B; 38217906
BIOLOGY
5 Ultrasonography of the multifidus muscle in student circus artists with and without low back pain: a cross-sectional study Bianca Rossini 37029443
PERFORM
6 Deep reconstruction of high-quality ultrasound images from raw plane-wave data: A simulation and in vivo study Goudarzi S; Rivaz H; 35728310
ENCS
7 Ultrasound Imaging Analysis of the Lumbar Multifidus Muscle Echo Intensity: Intra-Rater and Inter-Rater Reliability of a Novice and an Experienced Rater Fortin M; Rosenstein B; Levesque J; Nandlall N; 34065340
PERFORM
8 Lateral Position-Dependent Velocity Estimation Error in Plane-Wave Doppler Ultrasound Systems Wei L; Williams R; Loupas T; Helfield B; Burns PN; 34006440
IMAGING
9 LUMINOUS database: lumbar multifidus muscle segmentation from ultrasound images Belasso CJ; Behboodi B; Benali H; Boily M; Rivaz H; Fortin M; 33097024
PERFORM
10 The effect of low back pain and lower limb injury on lumbar multifidus muscle morphology and function in university soccer players. Nandlall N, Rivaz H, Rizk A, Frenette S, Boily M, Fortin M 32050966
PERFORM
11 Ultrasonography of multifidus muscle morphology and function in ice hockey players with and without low back pain. Fortin M, Rizk A, Frenette S, Boily M, Rivaz H 30897493
PERFORM

 

Title:The effect of micro-vessel viscosity on the resonance response of a two-microbubble system
Authors:Yusefi HHelfield B
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39705920/
DOI:10.1016/j.ultras.2024.107558
Publication:Ultrasonics
Keywords:Bubble dynamicsBubble-vessel interactionCavitationFinite-element modelingNonlinear vibrationsUltrasound contrast agentsUltrasound imaging
PMID:39705920 Category: Date Added:2024-12-21
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Physics, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6, Canada.
2 Department of Physics, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6, Canada; Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6, Canada. Electronic address: brandon.helfield@concordia.ca.

Description:

Clinical ultrasound contrast agent microbubbles remain intravascular and are between 1-8 µm in diameter, with a volume-weighted mean size of 2-3 µm. Despite their worldwide clinical utility as a diagnostic contrast agent, and their continued and ongoing success as a local therapeutic vector, the fundamental interplay between microbubbles - including bubble-bubble interaction and the effects of a neighboring viscoelastic vessel wall, remain poorly understood. In this work, we developed a finite element model to study the physics of the complex system of two different-sized bubbles (2 and 3 µm in diameter) confined within a viscoelastic vessel from a resonance response perspective (3-12 MHz). Here, we focus on the effect of micro-vessel wall viscosity on the resulting vibrational activity of the two-bubble system. The larger bubble (3 µm) was not influenced by its smaller companion bubble, and we observed a significant dampening effect across all transmit frequencies when confined within the vessel of increasing viscosity, an expected result. However, the smaller bubble (2 µm) was highly influenced by its larger neighboring bubble, including the induction of a strong low-frequency resonant response - resulting in transmit frequency windows in which its response in a lightly damped vessel far exceeded its vibration amplitude when unconfined. Further, micro-vessel wall dynamics closely mimic the frequency-dependence of the adjacent bubbles. Our findings imply that for a system of multi-bubbles within a viscoelastic vessel, the larger bubble physics dominates the system by inducing the smaller bubble and the vessel wall to follow its vibration - an effect that can be amplified within a lightly damped vessel. These findings have important implications for contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging and therapeutic applications.





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