Soft ultrasound priors in optoacoustic reconstruction: Improving clinical vascular imaging

Hong Yang, Dominik Jüstel, Jaya Prakash, Angelos Karlas, Anne Helfen, Max Masthoff, Moritz Wildgruber, Vasilis Ntziachristos

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Using the same ultrasound detector, hybrid optoacoustic-ultrasound (OPUS) imaging provides concurrent scans of tissue slices or volumes and visualizes complementary sound- and light-based contrast at similar resolutions. In addition to the benefit of hybrid contrast, spatial co-registration enables images from one modality to be employed as prior information for improving an aspect of the performance of the other modality. We consider herein a handheld OPUS system and utilize structural information from ultrasound images to guide regional Laplacian regularization-based reconstruction of optoacoustic images. Using phantoms and data from OPUS scans of human radial and carotid arteries, we show that ultrasound-driven optoacoustic inversion reduces limited-view artefacts and improves image contrast. In phantoms, prior-integrated reconstruction leads to a 50 % higher contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) of the image than standard reconstruction, and a 17 % higher structural similarity (SSIM) index. In clinical data, prior-integrated reconstruction detects deep-seated radial arteries with higher CNR than the standard method at three different depths. In this way, the prior-integrated method offers unique insights into atherosclerotic carotid plaques in humans (with p<0.01 between patients and healthy volunteers), potentially paving the way for new abilities in vascular imaging and more generally in optoacoustic imaging.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100172
JournalPhotoacoustics
Volume19
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2020

Keywords

  • Carotid
  • Hybrid imaging
  • Photoacoustics
  • Radial artery
  • Regional Laplacian regularization

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