Vector-flow imaging of slowly moving ex vivo blood with photoacoustics and pulse-echo ultrasound

We present a technique called photoacoustic vector-flow (PAVF) to quantify the speed and direction of flowing optical absorbers at each pixel from acoustic-resolution PA images. By varying the receiving angle at each pixel in post-processing, we obtain multiple estimates of the phase difference betw...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Caitlin Smith, Jami Shepherd, Guillaume Renaud, Kasper van Wijk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-08-01
Series:Photoacoustics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213597924000193
Description
Summary:We present a technique called photoacoustic vector-flow (PAVF) to quantify the speed and direction of flowing optical absorbers at each pixel from acoustic-resolution PA images. By varying the receiving angle at each pixel in post-processing, we obtain multiple estimates of the phase difference between consecutive frames. These are used to solve the overdetermined photoacoustic Doppler equation with a least-squares approach to estimate a velocity vector at each pixel. This technique is tested in bench-top experiments and compared to simultaneous pulse-echo ultrasound vector-flow (USVF) on whole rat blood at speeds on the order of 1 mm/s. Unlike USVF, PAVF can detect flow without stationary clutter filtering in this experiment, although the velocity estimates are highly underestimated. When applying spatio-temporal singular value decomposition clutter filtering, the flow speed can be accurately estimated with an error of 16.8% for USVF and −8.9% for PAVF for an average flow speed of 2.5 mm/s.
ISSN:2213-5979