Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement

<p><strong>Purpose: </strong>The Doppler string phantom provides accurate velocity of the string motion; it can be used to calibrate Doppler ultrasound (US) velocity measurements and to evaluate variations due to intrinsic spectral broadening. We developed a semi‐automated method t...

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Main Authors: Yi Zhang, Ted Lynch, Nicholas J Hangiandreou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IJCTO 2014-03-01
Series:International Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology
Online Access:http://ijcto.org/index.php/IJCTO/article/view/108
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spelling doaj-7af5d3634b3e4a26acd561b4baaba1592020-11-24T23:21:01ZengIJCTOInternational Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology 2330-40492014-03-012259Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurementYi Zhang0Ted Lynch1Nicholas J Hangiandreou2Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.Computerized Imaging Reference Systems, Inc, Norfolk, Virginia, USA.Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.<p><strong>Purpose: </strong>The Doppler string phantom provides accurate velocity of the string motion; it can be used to calibrate Doppler ultrasound (US) velocity measurements and to evaluate variations due to intrinsic spectral broadening. We developed a semi‐automated method to estimate the mode velocity (Vmode) and peak velocity (Vmax) based on duplex US images from a string phantom, and use them to assess clinical Doppler US velocity measurement.</p><p><strong>Methods</strong>: Steady motion of a rubber O‐ring (20 – 110 cm/s) in a CIRS Doppler String phantom (Model 043) was studied using GE LOGIQ E9 system with a 9L probe. 5 s of Doppler spectral data was averaged to generate a mean spectral profile. It was fitted by a Gaussian function and Vmode was defined as the velocity of the Gaussian peak, while Vmax is defined as the velocity at which the spectral profile falls to within 1 SD of the background. Vmode and Vmax were evaluated against the prescribed motor velocity. Repeatability and variation to scanning parameters were analyzed and reported in % range, i.e. (max – min) / mean.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Vmode and Vmax had good repeatability over six days (6.0% for Vmode, 2.9% for Vmax). Gain, compression, scale, sample volume (SV) depth and length, frequency and beam steering all had minimal impact on Vmode and Vmax (variations ≤ 4.4%). Doppler angle θ had minimal effect on Vmode (2.2%) but a strong effect on Vmax (26% increase as θ increased from 10° to 60°). Vmode was linearly correlated with but overestimated the motor velocity (Pearson’s r = 1.05, R<sup>2 </sup>= 1).</p><p><strong>Conclusion</strong>: This study developed a simple yet robust Vmode and Vmax estimation method. Combined with a string phantom, these velocity estimators are shown to be a useful tool to evaluate clinical Doppler US system performance. For the tested system, only Doppler angle has an appreciable impact on Vmax estimation.</p><p>--------------------------------------------</p><p><strong>Cite this article as</strong>: Zhang Y, Lynch T, Hangiandreou NJ. Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement. Int J Cancer Ther Oncol 2014; 2(2):020246. <strong>DOI:10.14319/ijcto.0202.46</strong><br /><br /></p>http://ijcto.org/index.php/IJCTO/article/view/108
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yi Zhang
Ted Lynch
Nicholas J Hangiandreou
spellingShingle Yi Zhang
Ted Lynch
Nicholas J Hangiandreou
Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement
International Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology
author_facet Yi Zhang
Ted Lynch
Nicholas J Hangiandreou
author_sort Yi Zhang
title Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement
title_short Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement
title_full Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement
title_fullStr Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement
title_full_unstemmed Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement
title_sort doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement
publisher IJCTO
series International Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology
issn 2330-4049
publishDate 2014-03-01
description <p><strong>Purpose: </strong>The Doppler string phantom provides accurate velocity of the string motion; it can be used to calibrate Doppler ultrasound (US) velocity measurements and to evaluate variations due to intrinsic spectral broadening. We developed a semi‐automated method to estimate the mode velocity (Vmode) and peak velocity (Vmax) based on duplex US images from a string phantom, and use them to assess clinical Doppler US velocity measurement.</p><p><strong>Methods</strong>: Steady motion of a rubber O‐ring (20 – 110 cm/s) in a CIRS Doppler String phantom (Model 043) was studied using GE LOGIQ E9 system with a 9L probe. 5 s of Doppler spectral data was averaged to generate a mean spectral profile. It was fitted by a Gaussian function and Vmode was defined as the velocity of the Gaussian peak, while Vmax is defined as the velocity at which the spectral profile falls to within 1 SD of the background. Vmode and Vmax were evaluated against the prescribed motor velocity. Repeatability and variation to scanning parameters were analyzed and reported in % range, i.e. (max – min) / mean.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Vmode and Vmax had good repeatability over six days (6.0% for Vmode, 2.9% for Vmax). Gain, compression, scale, sample volume (SV) depth and length, frequency and beam steering all had minimal impact on Vmode and Vmax (variations ≤ 4.4%). Doppler angle θ had minimal effect on Vmode (2.2%) but a strong effect on Vmax (26% increase as θ increased from 10° to 60°). Vmode was linearly correlated with but overestimated the motor velocity (Pearson’s r = 1.05, R<sup>2 </sup>= 1).</p><p><strong>Conclusion</strong>: This study developed a simple yet robust Vmode and Vmax estimation method. Combined with a string phantom, these velocity estimators are shown to be a useful tool to evaluate clinical Doppler US system performance. For the tested system, only Doppler angle has an appreciable impact on Vmax estimation.</p><p>--------------------------------------------</p><p><strong>Cite this article as</strong>: Zhang Y, Lynch T, Hangiandreou NJ. Doppler string phantom for assessment of clinical doppler ultrasound velocity measurement. Int J Cancer Ther Oncol 2014; 2(2):020246. <strong>DOI:10.14319/ijcto.0202.46</strong><br /><br /></p>
url http://ijcto.org/index.php/IJCTO/article/view/108
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