| Literature DB >> 26014494 |
Hendrik Ballhausen1, Bianca Désirée Ballhausen2, Martin Lachaine3, Minglun Li4, Katia Parodi5, Claus Belka6, Michael Reiner7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Three-dimensional ultrasound (3D-US) is used in planning and treatment during external beam radiotherapy. The accuracy of the technique depends not only on the achievable image quality in clinical routine, but also on technical limitations of achievable precision during calibration. Refraction of ultrasound waves is a known source for geometric distortion, but such an effect was not expected in homogenous calibration phantoms. However, in this paper we demonstrate that the discontinuity of the refraction index at the phantom surface may affect the calibration unless the ultrasound probe is perfectly perpendicular to the phantom.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26014494 PMCID: PMC4450514 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-015-0424-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Experimental setup
Fig. 2Snell’s law governs the refraction of ultrasound waves at the interface between water and phantom
Ultrasound probe orientation affected mostly the longitudinal position readings
| Number of experiment, number of observer | Slope in longitudinal direction (mm/°) | Slope in lateral direction (mm/°) | Slope in vertical direction (mm/°) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st experiment, 1st observer (HB) | +0.123 ± 0.006 (r2 = 0.92) | –0.016 ± 0.005 (r2 = 0.19) | +0.004 ± 0.002 (r2 = 0.06) |
| 1st experiment, 2nd observer (BDB) | +0.122 ± 0.009 (r2 = 0.82) | –0.015 ± 0.004 (r2 = 0.30) | – 0.010 ± 0.004 (r2 = 0.16) |
| 1st experiment, 3rd observer (MR) | +0.126 ± 0.005 (r2 = 0.95) | –0.013 ± 0.005 (r2 = 0.16) | +0.001 ± 0.003 (r2 = 0.00) |
| 2nd experiment, 1st observer (HB) | +0.211 ± 0.009 (r2 = 0.93) | –0.017 ± 0.008 (r2 = 0.12) | +0.026 ± 0.009 (r2 = 0.18) |
| 2nd experiment, 2nd observer (BDB) | +0.157 ± 0.008 (r2 = 0.91) | +0.014 ± 0.006 (r2 = 0.12) | +0.035 ± 0.006 (r2 = 0.43) |
| 3rd experiment, 1st observer (HB) | +0.124 ± 0.006 (r2 = 0.93) | +0.013 ± 0.004 (r2 = 0.21) | -0.016 ± 0.003 (r2 = 0.48) |
| 3rd experiment, 2nd observer (BDB) | +0.110 ± 0.005 (r2 = 0.92) | +0.013 ± 0.003 (r2 = 0.42) | -0.011 ± 0.003 (r2 = 0.29) |
Fig. 3During the first experiment, there was a linear relationship between probe orientation and position reading
Fig. 4The temperature dependence is visible from the two experiments at 0 °C (left) and 21 °C (right). The lower the water temperature, the more pronounced the difference in refraction index became