Debomita Basu, R. M. Arthur and J. W. Trobaugh, "Role of Collagen in the Temperature Dependence of Ultrasonic Backscatter", Memphis Biomedical Imaging Symposium 2007, Memphis, Tennessee, 1-2 November 2007.
Abstract
Purpose. The combination of hyperthermia with conventional
chemotherapy or radiation has proven to be beneficial in the treatment of
cancer. A major limitation for hyperthermia currently is the absence of
adequate information about the temperature distribution in soft tissue to guide
thermal dosimetry. We predicted a monotonic change in ultrasound
backscattered energy using lipid and aqueous sub-wavelength scatterers [1].
In-vitro experiments with porcine and turkey tissue verified this
prediction. Studies by others have indicated that the echo pattern in
ultrasonic images is determined largely by the content, configuration, and
distribution of collagen. To better understand the phenomena that cause
changes in backscattered energy (CBE), we have 1) refined our theoretical model
to include collagen and 2) examined the relationship between CBE and tissue
structure in both simulated and measured images.
Methods. CBE images were formed from simulated B-mode images [2].
Simulated images were based on random distributions of populations of aqueous,
lipid and collagen scatterers in an aqueous medium. Measured CBE was found
from ultrasonic images of turkey breast in a water bath during heating from 37oC
to 50oC in 0.5oC steps. Images were obtained with a
Terason 2000 system (Teratech Corp., Burlington, MA) using a 7.5 MHz linear
probe by placing the transducer both parallel and perpendicular to the turkey
muscle fibers. For both simulated and measured images, CBE images were
calculated from the squared envelopes of the B-mode images. CBE images
were compared to their respective B-mode images.
Results. Correlation coefficients from CBE based on simulated
images showed significant correlation between the CBE and the B-mode images.
Simulated images used random placement of scatterers and therefore does not show
any specific structure. For the experimental results, there was a weak
correlation (r = 0.2-0.34) for both alignments of the transducer with respect to
the fiber direction of the turkey muscle. Correlation was also found from
regions of bright echo (r =0.39 and 0.36 for parallel and perpendicular
orientations, respectively), but was strongest for regions with pure speckle
texture (r = 0.8 and 0.65, respectively).
Conclusion. Examination of the statistical correlation between CBE
images and their respective B-mode images indicates strong correlation between
speckle texture and CBE. The effect, however, of tissue constituents and
structure on CBE is not clear. Further investigation of this phenomenon is
being done by comparing histological studies with CBE images to correlate fiber
structure with the change in backscattered energy.
Support: R21-CA90531, R01-CA107558 and the Wilkinson Trust at Washington University, St. Louis.