TY - JOUR
T1 - Estimating the Neovascularity of Human Finger Tendon Through High-Frequency Ultrasound Micro-Doppler Imaging
AU - Qiu, Xi Rui
AU - Wang, Mu Ting
AU - Huang, Hsin
AU - Kuo, Li Chieh
AU - Hsu, Hsiu Yu
AU - Yang, Tai Hua
AU - Su, Fong Chin
AU - Huang, Chih Chung
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1964-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2022/8/1
Y1 - 2022/8/1
N2 - Objective: Neovascularization of injured tendons prolongs the proliferative phase of healing, but prolonged neovascularization may cause improper healing and pain. Currently, ultrasound Doppler imaging is used for measuring the neovascularization of injured tendons (e.g., Achilles tendon). However, the resolution of state-of-the-art clinical ultrasound machines is insufficient for visualizing the neovascularization in finger tendons. In this study, a high-frequency micro-Doppler imaging (HFμDI) based on 40-MHz ultrafast ultrasound imaging was proposed for visualizing the neovascularization in injured finger tendons during multiple rehabilitation phases. Method: The vessel visibility was enhanced through a block-wise singular value decomposition filter and several curvilinear structure enhancement strategies, including the bowler-hat transform and Hessian-based vessel enhancement filtering. HFμDI was verified through small animal kidney and spleen imaging because the related vessel structure patterns of mice are well studied. Five patients with finger tendon injuries underwent HFμDI examination at various rehabilitation phases after surgery (weeks 11-56), and finger function evaluations were performed for comparisons. Results: The results of small animal experiments revealed that the proposed HFμDI provides excellent microvasculature imaging performance; the contrast-to-noise ratio of HFμDI was approximately 15 dB higher than that of the conventional singular value decomposition filter, and the minimum detectable vessel size for mouse kidney was 35 μm without the use of contrast agent. In the human study, neovascularization was clearly observed in injured finger tendons during the early phase of healing (weeks 11-21), but it regressed from week 52 to 56. Finger rehabilitation appears to help reduce neovascularization; neovascular density decreased by approximately 1.8%-8.0% in participants after 4 weeks of rehabilitation. Conclusion: The experimental results verified the performance of HFμDI for microvasculature imaging and its potential for injured finger tendon evaluations.
AB - Objective: Neovascularization of injured tendons prolongs the proliferative phase of healing, but prolonged neovascularization may cause improper healing and pain. Currently, ultrasound Doppler imaging is used for measuring the neovascularization of injured tendons (e.g., Achilles tendon). However, the resolution of state-of-the-art clinical ultrasound machines is insufficient for visualizing the neovascularization in finger tendons. In this study, a high-frequency micro-Doppler imaging (HFμDI) based on 40-MHz ultrafast ultrasound imaging was proposed for visualizing the neovascularization in injured finger tendons during multiple rehabilitation phases. Method: The vessel visibility was enhanced through a block-wise singular value decomposition filter and several curvilinear structure enhancement strategies, including the bowler-hat transform and Hessian-based vessel enhancement filtering. HFμDI was verified through small animal kidney and spleen imaging because the related vessel structure patterns of mice are well studied. Five patients with finger tendon injuries underwent HFμDI examination at various rehabilitation phases after surgery (weeks 11-56), and finger function evaluations were performed for comparisons. Results: The results of small animal experiments revealed that the proposed HFμDI provides excellent microvasculature imaging performance; the contrast-to-noise ratio of HFμDI was approximately 15 dB higher than that of the conventional singular value decomposition filter, and the minimum detectable vessel size for mouse kidney was 35 μm without the use of contrast agent. In the human study, neovascularization was clearly observed in injured finger tendons during the early phase of healing (weeks 11-21), but it regressed from week 52 to 56. Finger rehabilitation appears to help reduce neovascularization; neovascular density decreased by approximately 1.8%-8.0% in participants after 4 weeks of rehabilitation. Conclusion: The experimental results verified the performance of HFμDI for microvasculature imaging and its potential for injured finger tendon evaluations.
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U2 - 10.1109/TBME.2022.3152151
DO - 10.1109/TBME.2022.3152151
M3 - Article
C2 - 35192458
AN - SCOPUS:85125305321
SN - 0018-9294
VL - 69
SP - 2667
EP - 2678
JO - IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
JF - IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
IS - 8
ER -