| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10690677 | Ultrasonics | 2005 | 5 Pages | 
Abstract
												The aim of this study was to investigate the agreement in HIFU-induced lesion sizes between measurements based on gross histological examination and those from images. Experiments were conducted in an experimental arrangement with a three-way multiscan ultrasonic inspection system and imaging was done by B-mode ultrasound (US). Bovine thigh muscle with and without fascia lata was treated with an in situ spatially averaged focal intensity ranging between 750 W cmâ2 and 1565 W cmâ2 and sonication-time was variable from 8 to 20 s. Assessment of the two measurement methods showed a rather weak correlation in the samples without fascia lata. For clarity and convenience in the discussion, sample muscles with and without fascia lata were labeled F and M, respectively. It was difficult to measure the lesion size from ultrasonographic images of F samples, so there was disagreement in the samples with fascia lata. This investigation showed that the presence of fascia lata in bovine thigh muscle has the likely effect of affecting the ultrasound image and makes it difficult to distinguish coagulated tissue from surrounding healthy tissue. There was no significant correlation between ultrasonography and the gross histological findings in M samples. Data supported that at for an in situ spatially averaged focal intensity ranging between 750 W cmâ2 and 1565 W cmâ2 and relatively shorter exposures (sonication-time variable from 1 to 8 s) higher correlation between image and gross histology measurement was found in excised bovine muscle specimens.
											Related Topics
												
													Physical Sciences and Engineering
													Physics and Astronomy
													Acoustics and Ultrasonics
												
											Authors
												Gao Kun, Mingxi Wan, 
											