Title: Resident Physics Lectures
1Resident Physics Lectures
George David, M.S. Associate Professor of
Radiology
2Scanner Processing of Echoes
- Amplification
- Compensation
- Compression
- Demodulation
- Rejection
3Amplification
- Increases small voltage signals from transducer
- incoming voltage signal
- 10s of millivolts
- larger voltage required for processing storage
Amplifier
4Compensation
- Amplification
- Compensation
- Compression
- Demodulation
- Rejection
5Your Scanner Knows
- Delay time between sound transmission and echo
- Direction sound transmitted
- Intensity of echo
6Your Scanner Assumes
- Speed of sound in body
- Sound travels in straight line
- Constant sound attenuation in body
- Scanner corrects echo intensities based on this
assumption
7Attenuation Correction
- intensity of dot indicates strength of echo
- equal intensity echoes should appear to have
equal gray shade regardless of depth of echo
structure
8Need for Compensation
- equal intensity reflections from different depths
return with different intensities - different travel distances
- attenuation is function of path length
echo intensity
time since pulse
9Compensation
- Problem
- how to display equal echoes from different depths
at equal intensities - Solution
- late echoes need to be amplified more than early
echoes - compensates for greater attenuation suffered by
later echoes
10Equal Echoes
11dB Calculation
Power ratio dB 1
0 2 3 10
10 100 20 1000
30
4 MHz
Attenuation 0.5 dB/cm/MHz X 10 cm X 4 MHz or 20
dB or Factor of 100 attenuation
5 cm
12Compensation (TGC)
- Body attenuation varies from 0.5 dB/cm/MHz
- TGC allows manual fine tuning of compensation vs.
delay - TGC curve often displayed graphically
13Compensation (TGC)
- TGC adjustment affects all echoes at a specific
distance range from transducer
14Compression
- Amplification
- Compensation
- Compression
- Demodulation
- Rejection
15Challenge
- Design scale that can weigh both feather
elephant
16Challenge Re-Stated
- Find a scale that can tell which feather weighs
more which elephant weighs more
17Dynamic Range
- ratio of largest to smallest power an electronic
system can process - can be expressed in dB
18Logarithm Review
- logarithms are exponents
- log10x is exponent to which 10 is raised to get x
- log10100 2 because 102100
19Logarithms Dynamic Range
90,000
1
90
1
Using logarithms the difference between 10,000
100,000 is the same as the difference between 10
100
20Compression
Cant easily distinguish between 1 10 here
3 log 1000
2 log 100
Difference between 1 10 the same as between 100
1000
1 log 10
0 log 10
Logarithms stretch low end of scale compress
high end
1
10
100
1000
21Compression
- Logarithmic amplifier
- hardware which does compression
- accepts widely varying input
- takes logarithm of input
- amplifies logarithm
- Compressed logarithmic output dynamic range
matches other system components
Input
Logarithm
100,000
5
10,000
4
1,000
3
100
2
10
1
1
0
22Demodulation
- Amplification
- Compensation
- Compression
- Demodulation
- Rejection
23Demodulation Radio
- Any station (frequency) can carry any format
24Demodulation
- Height or magnitude of received sine wave
indicates beam intensity - Frequency of echoed sound beam same as operating
frequency - Exception moving structures
25Demodulation
- Intensity information carried on envelope of
operating frequencys sine wave - varying amplitude of sine wave
- demodulation separates intensity information from
sine wave
26Demodulation Sub-steps
- rectify
- turn negative signals positive
- smooth
- follow peaks
27Rejection
- Amplification
- Compensation
- Compression
- Demodulation
- Rejection
28Rejection
- also known as
- suppression
- threshold
- object
- eliminate small amplitude voltage pulses
- reason
- reduce noise
- electronic noise
- acoustic noise
- noise contributes no useful information to image
Amplitudes below dotted line reset to zero
29Image Resolution
- Detail Resolution
- spatial resolution
- separation required to produce separate
reflections - Detail Resolution types
Axial
Lateral
30Resolution Reflector Size
- minimum imaged size of a reflector in each
dimension is equal to resolution - Objects never imaged smaller than systems
resolution
31Axial Resolution
- minimum reflector separation in direction of
sound travel which produces separate reflections - depends on spatial pulse length
- Distance in space covered by a pulse
H.......E.......Y
HEY
Spatial Pulse Length
32Axial Resolution
Axial Resolution Spatial Pulse Length / 2
Gap Separate Echoes
Separation just greater than half
the spatial pulse length
33Axial Resolution
Axial Resolution Spatial Pulse Length / 2
Overlap No Gap No Separate Echoes
Separation just less than half the spatial pulse
length
34Improve Axial Resolution by Reducing Spatial
Pulse Length
Spat. Pulse Length cycles per pulse X
wavelength
Speed Wavelength X Frequency
- increase frequency
- Decreases wavelength
- decreases penetration limits imaging depth
- Reduce cycles per pulse
- requires damping
- reduces intensity
- increases bandwidth
35Lateral Resolution
- Definition
- minimum separation between reflectors in
direction perpendicular to beam travel which
produces separate reflections when the beam is
scanned across them
Lateral Resolution Beam Diameter
36Lateral Resolution
- if separation is greater than beam diameter,
objects can be resolved as two reflectors
37Lateral Resolution
- Complication
- beam diameter varies with distance from
transducer - Near zone length varies with
- Frequency
- transducer diameter
Near zone length
Near zone
Far zone
38Lateral Resolution
- Improving lateral resolution for unfocused beam
at one depth hurts resolution elsewhere - axial resolution constant at all depths
- electronic focusing is primary means of reducing
beam diameter - improving lateral resolution
- requires phased array transducers
- most common type
- multiple focal zones can be defined
- Slows imaging
39Contrast Resolution
40Contrast Resolution
- difference in echo intensity between 2 echoes for
them to be assigned different digital values
88
89
41Pre-Processing
- Assigning of specific values to analog echo
intensities - analog to digital (A/D) converter
- converts output signal from receiver (after
rejection) to a value
89
42Digital Image Bit Depth
- bit depth controls of possible values a pixel
can have - increasing bit depth results in
- more possible values for a pixel
- better contrast resolution
43Gray Scale
- the more candidate values for a pixel
- the more shades of gray image can be stored in
digital image - The less difference between echo intensity
required to guarantee different pixel values - See next slide
447
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2
4
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4
45Display Limitations
- not possible to display all shades of gray
simultaneously - window level controls determine how pixel
values are mapped to gray shades - numbers (pixel values) do not change window
level only change gray shade mapping
17
Change window / level
65
65
46Presentation of Brightness Levels
- pixel values assigned brightness levels
- pre-processing
- manipulating brightness levels does not affect
image data - post-processing
- window
- level
47Pre-Processing
- Contrast resolution (dB/gray shade) corresponds
to minimum intensity difference between pixel
values
Contrast Resolution of Digital Memories with 40
dB dynamic range
40/16
40/32
48The End