Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1761971 | Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology | 2010 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
A new ultrasound-based technique is proposed to assess the arterial stiffness: the radiation force of an ultrasonic beam focused on the arterial wall induces a transient shear wave (â¼10 ms) whose propagation is tracked by ultrafast imaging. The large and high-frequency content (100 to 1500 Hz) of the induced wave enables studying the wave dispersion, which is shown experimentally in vitro and numerically to be linked to arterial wall stiffness and geometry. The proposed method is applied in vivo. By repeating the acquisition up to 10 times per second (theoretical maximal frame rate is â¼100 Hz), it is possible to assess in vivo the arterial wall elasticity dynamics: shear modulus of a healthy volunteer carotid wall is shown to vary strongly during the cardiac cycle and measured to be 130 ± 15 kPa in systole and 80 ± 10 kPa in diastole. (E-mail: mathieu.couade@gmail.com)
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Acoustics and Ultrasonics
Authors
Mathieu Couade, Mathieu Pernot, Claire Prada, Emmanuel Messas, Joseph Emmerich, Patrick Bruneval, Aline Criton, Mathias Fink, Mickael Tanter,