3D ultrasound imaging with wide focused transmit beams at high display frame rates

文档序号:704666 发布日期:2021-04-13 浏览:29次 中文

阅读说明:本技术 利用宽聚焦发射波束以高显示帧速率进行3d超声成像 (3D ultrasound imaging with wide focused transmit beams at high display frame rates ) 是由 M·阮 J-L·F-M·罗伯特 于 2019-09-04 设计创作,主要内容包括:超声系统以高显示帧速率产生3D图像。利用平面波或发散发射波束扫描体积区域以随着每个发射事件而声穿透大部分或者甚至整个体积区域。为了避免在方位角和仰角维度上采集到杂波信号,以在仰角和方位角方向中间的角度发射平面波或发散波束。通过以均为仰角和方位角方向两者的组合的多个不同角度发射平面波或发散波束,在得到的复合图像中减少了旁瓣杂波。(Ultrasound systems produce 3D images at high display frame rates. A volumetric region is scanned with a plane wave or diverging transmit beam to insonify a majority or even the entire volumetric region with each transmit event. To avoid clutter signals being collected in both the azimuth and elevation dimensions, a plane wave or diverging beam is transmitted at an angle intermediate to the elevation and azimuth directions. By transmitting plane waves or diverging beams at a plurality of different angles, both in elevation and in azimuth, a combination of both reduces side lobe clutter in the resulting composite image.)

1. An ultrasound imaging system for producing a three-dimensional image of a target volume, comprising:

an ultrasound probe comprising a two-dimensional array of transducer elements adapted to emit plane or diverging waves into the target volume and to acquire ultrasound echo signals returning from the target volume,

wherein the two-dimensional array is further adapted to launch a plurality of such waves at different angles towards the target volume;

a receiver coupled to receive the echo signals from each transmission and adapted to process the echo signals returned from the target volume on a spatial basis;

an image data compositor coupled to the receiver and adapted to composite image data generated in response to each transmission on a spatial basis;

an image processor coupled to receive the composite image data and adapted to produce a volumetric image; and

a display adapted to display the volumetric image.

2. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1, wherein the two-dimensional array is further adapted to transmit a plurality of such waves at an angle relative to the array that is intermediate an azimuth direction and an elevation direction.

3. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1, wherein the two-dimensional array is further adapted to transmit a plurality of such waves at an angle comprising both an azimuth dimension and an elevation dimension.

4. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1, wherein the receiver further comprises a beamformer adapted to process received echo signals by beamforming.

5. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 4 wherein the ultrasound probe further comprises a microbeamformer coupled to the elements of the two-dimensional array, the microbeamformer adapted to perform partial beamforming of echo signals received by patches of array elements.

6. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 5, wherein the beamformer is further adapted to beamform partially beamformed echo signals produced by the microbeamformer.

7. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 4, wherein the image data compositor further comprises an image data memory adapted to store echo signals on a spatial basis.

8. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1 wherein the receiver further comprises a synthetic focus processor.

9. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 8, further comprising a memory adapted to store echo signals acquired by the two-dimensional array on a spatial basis.

10. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 8, wherein the synthetic focus processor further comprises the image data compositor and is adapted to combine echo signals received from the target volume from multiple transmissions on a spatial basis.

11. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1, wherein the image processor further comprises a B-mode processor.

12. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1, wherein the image processor further comprises a doppler processor.

13. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1, wherein the image processor further comprises a multiplanar reformatter adapted to extract image data for an image plane from the 3D data set.

14. The ultrasound imaging system of claim 1, wherein the image processor further comprises a volume renderer adapted to generate a projection image from the 3D image data set.

15. A method for generating a three-dimensional image of a target volume, comprising:

transmitting a plane wave or a diverging wave to the target volume and acquiring an ultrasound echo signal returning from the target volume, wherein a plurality of such waves are transmitted at different angles to the target volume;

receiving the echo signals from each of the transmissions,

processing the echo signals returned from the target volume on a spatial basis;

compositing, on a spatial basis, image data generated in response to each emission;

generating a volumetric image from the compounded image data; and is

Displaying the volumetric image.

Technical Field

The present invention relates to ultrasound imaging systems, and in particular to three-dimensional (3D) ultrasound imaging with a high display frame rate using widely focused or unfocused transmit beams.

Background

Two-dimensional (2D) ultrasound imaging is typically performed by scanning a planar image field with a one-dimensional (1D) array transducer. A beam is transmitted within the image field and echoes are acquired in response to each transmission. The received echoes are beamformed by a delay and sum beamformer to form scanlines of coherent echo signals across the image field. A typical number of scan lines for an image may be 128-196 scan lines. The scan lines are processed by B-mode or doppler processing to form a planar image of the tissue and/or flow in the planar image field.

A similar method can be used to scan a volumetric image field to produce a three-dimensional (3D) image of a volumetric region. The beam is again transmitted and the echoes received, but this time not just a plane throughout the volume. Thus, scanning a volume takes much longer for 3D imaging. If, for example, the volume has the same elevation and azimuth dimensions as those of the planar image described above, an image of equivalent quality requires 128x128 scan lines, for a total of over 16000 scan lines. Since the echo acquisition time is governed by the fixed speed of sound in the subject, the time required to acquire the entire volumetric image is long, and thus the display frame rate will be slow.

A solution to the slow frame rate problem is to transmit beams that each insonify and return echoes from a larger region of the volume, thereby requiring fewer transmit beams to scan the entire volume and produce a 3D image. The ultimate extension of this concept is to emit a beam that insonifies most or even all of the volumetric region. However, the tradeoff is poor image resolution, since there is little, if any, transmit beam focusing. A measure that can be taken to overcome this problem is to scan a volumetric region multiple times and then combine the structures, the combined scans resulting in an improvement in resolution throughout the image.

This approach can still result in a 3D image with significant image clutter since the sidelobe levels of the largely unfocused transmit beam pattern will typically be very high. High sidelobe levels capture off-axis energy that will appear as image clutter in the final image.

Disclosure of Invention

The present invention advantageously enables a developed volumetric region with only a few broad beams that provide an improvement in display frame rate, but without excessive clutter in the resulting 3D image.

In accordance with the principles of the present invention, an ultrasound imaging system is described that produces 3D images at high display frame rates. A volumetric region is scanned with a plane wave or diverging transmit beam to insonify most or even the entire volumetric region with each transmit event. To avoid clutter signals being collected in both the azimuth and elevation dimensions, a plane wave or diverging beam is transmitted at an angle intermediate to the elevation and azimuth directions. By transmitting plane waves or diverging beams at a plurality of different angles, both in elevation and azimuth dimensions, a side lobe clutter is reduced in the resulting composite image.

According to another aspect, the present invention provides a method for generating a three-dimensional image. In one embodiment, the method includes transmitting a plane wave or a diverging wave to the target volume and acquiring an ultrasound echo signal returning from the target volume. A plurality of such waves are launched at different angles towards the target volume. The echo signals are received from the transmission and then processed on a spatial basis. The image data generated in response to each emission may be composited on a spatial basis. A volumetric image is generated from the compounded image data. Displaying the volumetric image.

Drawings

In the drawings:

fig. 1a, 1b and 1c illustrate the sidelobe pattern of the aperture of a two-dimensional transducer array.

Figure 2 illustrates the sidelobe improvement obtained by scanning a volumetric region with diverging beams at an angle intermediate the azimuth and elevation directions.

Fig. 3a and 3b illustrate two different divergent beam scanning patterns, both at angles that encompass both the azimuth and elevation directions.

Figure 4 illustrates divergent scan volumes for two of the vertices of figure 3 a.

Figure 5 illustrates the sidelobe improvement resulting from the use of the divergent-beam scanning pattern of figure 3 a.

Figure 6 illustrates the sidelobe improvement resulting from the use of the divergent-beam scanning pattern of figure 3 b.

Figure 7 illustrates in block diagram form an ultrasound imaging system constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention.

Figure 8 illustrates in block diagram form a second ultrasound imaging system constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention.

Detailed Description

FIG. 1a is a perspective view of an aperture of a two-dimensional array 12 of transducer elements, the two-dimensional array 12 having rows and columns of elements extending in the azimuth (Az) and elevation (El) dimensions. The beam pattern of such an array is a fourier complement of its apertures, shown graphically in perspective in fig. 1 b. As the beam pattern illustrates, the main lobe of the beam is aligned in the elevation direction of the columns of elements and in the azimuth direction of the rows of elements. A cross section taken through one of these predominant directions is shown in fig. 1 c. The graph illustrates a central main lobe 50 flanked on either side by a descending pattern of side lobes 52. The energy of the main lobe is expected to be believed to accompany an appreciable amount of off-axis energy captured by a number of side lobes 52 of significant amplitude. It is desirable to reduce the level of these side lobes to reduce clutter in the ultrasound image.

Sidelobe levels can be reduced when the plane wave or diverging beam is transmitted at an angle that is neither azimuth nor elevation, but is intermediate to the two, such as diagonal to the two reference dimensions. The resulting beam pattern will thus be diagonal across the transmit beam pattern of fig. 1 b. Figure 2 illustrates this effect with reference to an ultrasound phantom 60 containing 9 target reflectors in a central horizontal plane 62. When the phantom is scanned through a 9x9 sequence of diverging beams, all 81 shots from the 81 individual and evenly spaced transmit volume vertices, an image is formed by the central azimuthal plane 64 of the phantom, as illustrated by the ultrasound image 70a on the left side of the image panel 70. The bright spots in the image are the central row of 3 reflectors in the phantom and are believed to have a considerable amount of clutter between the targets due to the high side lobe levels. The beam profile for this azimuth plane is shown in the left hand illustration 80a of the beam profile panel 80, which shows 3 peaks of the target reflector with a middle sidelobe level of about-30 dB. Ultrasound images 70b and beam profile 80b show similar results for images of three target reflectors in the central elevation plane 66 of the phantom.

But when the image is formed by the diagonal planes 68 of the phantom aligned diagonally across the array aperture, the resulting side lobes are significantly lower, with levels below-50 dB in the right beam plot 80 c. As a result, the three point targets in the diagonal plane 68 have much lower clutter levels, as shown by the right-most ultrasound image 70c in the image panel 70.

A grid 90 of transmit beam positions used to produce the experimental results of fig. 2 is shown in fig. 3a and 3 b. The result of fig. 2 is obtained by emitting a sequence of 81 divergent beams from the 2D array of apertures 12, where the apex of each divergent beam is a virtual apex located behind the surface of the array, such that the resulting divergent beams have the form of truncated pyramids. The 81 divergent beams have their vertices located at each horizontal and vertical intersection of the grid 90. The shapes of two of the beam volumes bounded by the large circular points AV1 and AV2 are shown in fig. 4. A vertex AV1 of a diverging beam volume is located on the grid 90 behind the 2D array of apertures 12 as shown in the figure. This point is centrally located with respect to the aperture as point AV1 shown in figure 3a, which causes the truncated pyramid of divergent beam energy to be symmetrically located with respect to the aperture as shown in figure 4. The solid line 92 marks the edge of the pyramid beam volume. If the centerline is drawn down from the pyramid apex AV1, it will extend from the center of the 2D array 12 and perpendicular to the surface of the array. The pyramid of divergent beam energy of the AV2 divergent beam on a diagonal towards the left rear corner of the grid as shown in fig. 4 results in a beam angled with respect to the AV1 beam, as seen by the dashed line 94 marking the edge of the AV2 pyramid beam volume. The entire AV2 divergent beam is thus steered in a different direction and angle relative to the AV1 divergent beam. Although the centerline of the AV2 pyramid is directed toward the center of the volumetric image field, it nevertheless extends from a different point of the array surface than the point of AV1 and at a different (non-orthogonal) angle. These angular differences of the diverging transmit beams result in lower side lobe levels of the resulting image when the echoes received from the diverging beam transmissions are compounded.

In fig. 3a, 17 grid intersections in a diagonal direction across the grid 90 define virtual vertices of 17 diverging plane waves emitted from corresponding 2D array apertures 12. As illustrated in fig. 4, 17 plane waves will be emitted at 17 different angles relative to the surface of the hole. When 17 such transmit plane wave beams are transmitted and the echoes they cause are acquired by the array and coherently combined on a volumetric spatial basis, images of the corresponding azimuth 64, elevation 66 and diagonal 68 planes of the phantom 60 are produced, as shown by the image panel 170 in figure 5. The corresponding beam profiles for the three images are shown in panel 182, where beam profile 180c for the diagonal plane shows the side lobe levels around-40 dB, which is circled by 182 in the figure.

The grid 90 of fig. 3b shows an intermediate sequence of 41 transmit events evenly distributed across the grid and in a diagonal relationship to each other, resulting in a plane wave divergent beam with 41 different transmit angles. When the phantom 60 is scanned with this scan sequence and the same three reference planes 64, 66, and 68 are imaged, images are presented as shown in the image panel 270 of fig. 6. With 41 different transmit volume angles, the sidelobe levels of the diagonal plane are around-50 dB, as circled at 282 in panel 280c, approaching the results of the 81 transmit event sequence shown in fig. 2.

Referring now to FIG. 7, an ultrasonic diagnostic imaging system constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention is shown in block diagram form. A two-dimensional array of transducer elements is provided in the ultrasound probe 10 for transmitting ultrasound waves and receiving echo information. The transducer array 12 is capable of scanning in three dimensions, with the beams steered in both elevation and azimuth. The transducer array 12 is coupled to a microbeamformer 14 in the probe, the microbeamformer 14 controlling the transmission and reception of signals through the array elements. The microbeamformer is a probe integrated circuit capable of transmit beam steering and at least partial beamforming of signals received by groups or "patches" of transducer elements, as described in U.S. patents US 5997479(Savord et al), US 6013032(Savord), US 6623432(Powers et al), and US 8177718 (Savord). The microbeamformer is coupled by the probe cable to a transmit/receive (T/R) switch 16, which switch 16 switches between transmit and receive and protects the system beamformer from high energy transmit signals. The transmission of plane wave or divergent ultrasound beams from the transducer array 12 under control of the microbeamformer 14 is directed by a beamformer controller 18 coupled to a T/R switch and main beamformer 20, which receives input from user operation of a user interface or control panel 38. Among the transmit characteristics controlled by the transmit controller are the focus, number, spacing, amplitude, shape, phase, frequency, polarity, and diversity of the transmit waveform. The beam formed in the direction of beam transmission may be steered directly forward from the transducer array or at different angles steered on either side of the non-steered beam for a wider fan field of view. For the 3D imaging techniques described above, unfocused plane waves or diverging beams are used for transmission.

The echoes received by adjacent groups of transducer elements ("patches") are beamformed by appropriately delaying them and then combining them in a microbeamformer 14. The partially beamformed signals produced by the microbeamformer 14 from each patch are coupled to a receiver in the form of a main beamformer 20 in which the partially beamformed signals from the individual patches of transducer elements are combined into received scanlines from fully beamformed coherent echo signals throughout the scanned target volume. Preferably, the beamformer 20 is a multiple beamformer which produces multiple receive scan lines from echoes received after a transmit event. For example, the main beamformer 20 may generate hundreds or even thousands of properly steered and spaced received scan lines from an insonified target volume.

The coherent echo signals of the scanlines received from each plane wave or divergent beam scan are stored in a scan complex memory 22 where they are combined on a spatial basis with echo signals received from previous scans of the target volume. When the received scan lines of each transmit volume are in a common spatial distribution with respect to the dimensions of the pyramid volume through which they are insonified, beamformer programming is facilitated, the scan lines from different scans are all at different spatial angles from each other in nature and the echoes from the intersections are combined on a spatial basis. Since the time of flight of each echo determines its spatial location in the volume, echoes having the same x, y, z coordinates in the target volume are added together and stored in corresponding x, y, z storage locations of the scan complex memory 22. As echoes from each different scan volume are received, they are added to the echo data previously received from the same x, y, z position of the target volume and stored in memory. In this manner, echoes received from all 81 (or 17 or 41) volume scans of the previous example are coherently combined in memory 22.

The coherent echo signals undergo signal processing by a signal processor 26, which includes filtering by digital filters and noise or speckle reduction as by frequency compounding. The filtered echo signals are also subjected to quadrature bandpass filtering in the signal processor 26. This operation performs three functions: band limiting the RF echo signal data, producing in-phase and quadrature pairs (I and Q) of echo signal data, and decimating the digital sampling rate. The signal processor can also shift the frequency band to a lower or baseband frequency range. For example, the digital filter of the signal processor 26 can be a filter of the type disclosed in US patent US5833613(Averkiou et al).

The compounded and processed coherent echo signals are coupled to a B mode processor 30, the B mode processor 30 producing B mode images (such as sets) for structures in the subjectWeave image). B mode processor by computation (I)2+Q2)1/2The amplitude of the echo signal in the form to perform amplitude (envelope) detection of the quadrature demodulated I and Q signal components. The quadrature echo signal components are also coupled to a doppler processor 34. The doppler processor 34 stores an ensemble of echo signals from discrete points in the image field, which is then used to estimate the doppler shift at a point in the image using a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) processor. The rate determination system at which the ensemble is acquired is able to accurately measure and delineate the range of velocities of motion in the image. The doppler shift is proportional to the motion (e.g., blood flow and tissue motion) at a point in the image field. For color doppler images, the estimated doppler flow value at each point in the blood vessel is wall filtered and converted to a color value using a lookup table. The wall filter has an adjustable cut-off frequency above or below which motion, such as low frequency motion of the vessel wall, will be rejected when imaging flowing blood. The B-mode image signals and doppler flow values are coupled to the multiplanar reformatter 32 and when a planar image of the scanned volume is desired, the multiplanar reformatter 32 extracts the image signals for the desired plane of the 3D image data set. The extraction is performed on the basis of the x, y, z coordinates of the 3D data set of tissue and flow signals, and the extracted signals are then formatted for display in a desired display format (e.g., a line display format or a sector display format). The B-mode image or the doppler image can be displayed separately, or both can be shown in anatomical registration, with a color doppler overlay showing tissue in the vessels and blood flow in the vessels of the B-mode tissue image. Another display possibility is to display side by side images of the same anatomical structure that have been processed differently. This display format is useful when comparing images.

The image data is coupled to an image memory 36, where the image data is stored in memory locations addressable according to the spatial location from which the image values were acquired. The image data from the 3D scan can be accessed by a volume renderer 42, which volume renderer 42 converts the echo signals of the 3D data set into a projected 3D image as viewed from a given reference point, as described in US 6530885(Entrekin et al). The 3D image produced by the volume renderer 42 and the 2D image produced from the planes of the scanned volume by the multi-plane reformatter 32 are coupled to the display processor 48 for further enhancement, buffering, and temporary storage for display on the image display 40.

A second embodiment of an ultrasound imaging system of the present invention is illustrated in block diagram form in fig. 8. Components having the same reference numbers operate in the same manner as in fig. 7 in the fig. 8 embodiment. However, instead of controlling the main system beamformer, the beamformer controller 118 now controls the addressing of the receivers in the form of a micro-channel memory 120 in addition to its control of the microbeamformer. The micro-channel memory is a 3D data memory that receives and stores signals generated by patches of elements of the 2D array transducer, storing them corresponding to their positions in the target volume being scanned. After all echo signals have been received from the target volume according to the transmission of plane waves or diverging beams, the 3D volume of data is combined on a spatial basis by the synthetic focus processor 122 with the 3D data received from the previous transmit event. Adding all echoes received from plane waves or divergent transmit events on a spatial basis achieves synthetic focusing whereby the image data at points throughout the volume is fully focused. See, for example, US patent US 4604697(Luthra et al) for a description of synthetic focusing. Similar to the previous embodiment, the combination of data by the synthetic focus processor provides a composite of 3D data sets from multiple plane waves or divergent scans of the target volume.

It should be noted that the component structure of an ultrasound system suitable for use in embodiments of the present invention, and in particular the ultrasound systems of figures 7 and 8, may be implemented in hardware, software, or a combination thereof. The various embodiments and/or components of the ultrasound system and its controller, or components and controllers therein, may also be implemented as part of one or more computers or microprocessors. The computer or processor may include a computing device, an input device, a display unit, and an interface, for example, for accessing the internet. The computer or processor may comprise a microprocessor. The microprocessor may be connected to a communication bus, for example, to access a PACS system or a data network for importing training images. The computer or processor may also include memory. The memory devices, such as scan complex memory 22, image memory 36, and multi-channel memory 120, may include Random Access Memory (RAM) and Read Only Memory (ROM). The computer or processor may also include a storage device, which may be a hard disk drive or a removable storage drive such as a floppy disk drive, optical disk drive, solid state thumb drive, or the like. The storage device may also be other similar means for loading computer programs or other instructions into the computer or processor.

As used herein, the terms "computer" or "module" or "processor" or "workstation" may include any processor-based or microprocessor-based system, including systems using microcontrollers, Reduced Instruction Set Computers (RISC), ASICs, logic circuits, and any other circuit or processor capable of executing the functions described herein. The above examples are exemplary only, and are thus not intended to limit in any way the definition and/or meaning of these terms.

The computer or processor executes a set of instructions stored in one or more storage elements in order to process input data. The storage elements may also store data or other information as desired or needed. The storage elements may be in the form of information sources or physical memory elements within the processing machine. The instruction set of the ultrasound system, including those instructions controlling the acquisition, processing, and display of ultrasound images as described above, may include various commands instructing a computer or processor as a processing machine to perform specific operations, such as the methods and processes of the various embodiments of the present invention. The set of instructions may be in the form of a software program. The software may take various forms, such as system software or application software, and may be embodied as a tangible and non-transitory computer-readable medium. The operations of the scan complex memory and the synthetic focus processor are typically performed at or below the direction of software routines. Further, the software may take the form of an individual program or collection of modules or portions of program modules within a larger program. The software may also include modular programming in the form of object-oriented programming. The processing of input data by a processing machine may be in response to an operator command, or in response to the results of a previous process, or in response to a request by another processing machine.

Furthermore, the limitations of the following claims are not written in functional module format, nor are they to be construed based on the 35u.s.c.112 paragraph six, unless and until such claim limitations explicitly use the phrase "module for … …", followed by a functional description with no further structure.

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