Higher Order Singular Value Decomposition Filter for Contrast Echocardiography

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Geraldi Wahyulaksana (Erasmus MC)

Luxi Wei (Erasmus MC)

Jason Voorneveld (Erasmus MC)

Maaike Te Lintel Hekkert (Erasmus MC)

Mihai Strachinaru (Erasmus MC)

Dirk J. Duncker (Erasmus MC)

Nico De Jong (Erasmus MC, TU Delft - ImPhys/De Jong group)

Antonius F.W. Van Der Steen (Erasmus MC, TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging, TU Delft - ImPhys/Verweij group)

Hendrik J. Vos (TU Delft - ImPhys/Verweij group, Erasmus MC)

Research Group
ImPhys/Verweij group
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/TUFFC.2023.3316130
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Research Group
ImPhys/Verweij group
Issue number
11
Volume number
70
Pages (from-to)
1371-1383
Downloads counter
325
Collections
Institutional Repository
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Abstract

Assessing the coronary circulation with contrast-enhanced echocardiography has high clinical relevance. However, it is not being routinely performed in clinical practice because the current clinical tools generally cannot provide adequate image quality. The contrast agent's visibility in the myocardium is generally poor, impaired by motion and nonlinear propagation artifacts. The established multipulse contrast schemes (MPCSs) and the more experimental singular value decomposition (SVD) filter also fall short to solve these issues. Here, we propose a scheme to process amplitude modulation/amplitude-modulated pulse inversion (AM/AMPI) echoes with higher order SVD (HOSVD) instead of conventionally summing the complementary pulses. The echoes from the complementary pulses form a separate dimension in the HOSVD algorithm. Then, removing the ranks in that dimension with dominant coherent signals coming from tissue scattering would provide the contrast detection. We performed both in vitro and in vivo experiments to assess the performance of our proposed method in comparison with the current standard methods. A flow phantom study shows that HOSVD on AM pulsing exceeds the contrast-to-background ratio (CBR) of conventional AM and an SVD filter by 10 and 14 dB, respectively. In vivo porcine heart results also demonstrate that, compared to AM, HOSVD improves CBR in open-chest acquisition (up to 19 dB) and contrast ratio (CR) in closed-chest acquisition (3 dB).