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Cited 9 time in webofscience Cited 9 time in scopus
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Ultrasound Deep Learning for Wall Segmentation and Near-Wall Blood Flow Measurement SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Ultrasound Deep Learning for Wall Segmentation and Near-Wall Blood Flow Measurement
Authors
Park, Jun HongLee, Sang Joon
Date Issued
2020-10
Publisher
IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
Abstract
Studies of medical flow imaging have technical limitations for accurate analysis of blood flow dynamics and vessel wall interaction at arteries. We propose a new deep learning-based boundary detection and compensation (DL-BDC) technique in ultrasound (US) imaging. It can segment vessel boundaries by harnessing the convolutional neural network and wall motion compensation in the analysis of near-wall flow dynamics. The network enables training from real and synthetic US images together. The performance of the technique is validated through synthetic US images and tissue-mimicking phantom experiments. The neural network performs well with high Dice coefficients of over 0.94 and 0.9 for lumens and walls, outperforming previous segmentation techniques. Then, the performance of the wall motion compensation is examined for compliant phantoms. When DL-BDC is applied to flow influenced by wall motion, root-mean-square errors are less than 0.07%. The technique is utilized to analyze flow dynamics and wall interaction with varying elastic moduli of the phantoms. The results show that the flow dynamics and wall shear stress values are consistent with the expected values of the compliant phantoms, and their wall motion behavior is observed with pulse wave propagation. This strategy makes US imaging capable of simultaneous measurement of blood flow and vessel dynamics in human arteries for their accurate interaction analysis. DL-BDC can segment vessel walls fast, accurately, and robustly. It enables to measure the near-wall flow precisely by determining the vessel boundary dynamics. This approach can be beneficial in flow dynamics and wall interaction analyses in various biomedical applications.
Keywords
MOTION; PRESSURE; HEART; TIME; VIVO
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/107818
DOI
10.1109/TUFFC.2020.2995467
ISSN
0885-3010
Article Type
Article
Citation
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ULTRASONICS FERROELECTRICS AND FREQUENCY CONTROL, vol. 67, no. 10, page. 2022 - 2032, 2020-10
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이상준LEE, SANG JOON
Dept of Mechanical Enginrg
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