| Literature DB >> 12546147 |
Yao Wang1, Douglas N Stephens, Matthew O'Donnell.
Abstract
Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) imaging systems using circumferential arrays mounted on cardiac catheter tips fire beams orthogonal to the principal axis of the catheter. The system produces high resolution cross-sectional images but must be guided by conventional angioscopy. A real-time forward-viewing array, integrated into the same catheter, could greatly reduce radiation exposure by decreasing angiographic guidance. Unfortunately, the mounting requirement of a catheter guide wire prohibits a full-disk imaging aperture. Given only an annulus of array elements, prior theoretical investigations have only considered a circular ring of point transceivers and focusing strategies using all elements in the highly dense array, both impractical assumptions. In this paper, we consider a practical array geometry and signal processing architecture for a forward-viewing IVUS system. Our specific design uses a total of 210 transceiver firings with synthetic reconstruction for a given 3-D image frame. Simulation results demonstrate this design can achieve side-lobes under -40 dB for on-axis situations and under -30 dB for steering to the edge of a 80 degrees cone.Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12546147 DOI: 10.1109/tuffc.2002.1159845
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control ISSN: 0885-3010 Impact factor: 2.725