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      Higher-order correlation based real-time beamforming in photoacoustic imaging

      , ,
      Journal of the Optical Society of America A
      Optica Publishing Group

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          Abstract

          Although a delay-and-sum (DAS) beamformer is best suited for real-time photoacoustic (PA) image formation, the reconstructed images are often afflicted by noises, sidelobes, and other intense artifacts due to inaccurate assumptions in PA signal correlation. The present work aims to develop a reconstruction method that reduces the occurrence of sidelobes and artifacts and thus improves the reconstructed image quality or imaging performance. This beamformer is fundamentally based on higher-order signal correlation wherein a higher number of delayed PA signals—compared to conventional delay-multiply-and-sum (DMAS)—are combined and summed up. The proposed technique provides significant improvements in resolution, contrast, and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) compared to traditional beamformers. For real-time implementation, the proposed algorithms were simplified, and their computational complexities were shrunk to the order of DAS [ O ( N ) ]. A GPU based study was also performed to validate the real-time capability of the proposed beamformers. For validation studies, both numerical simulation and experiments were conducted. Quantitative evaluation studies involving SNR, contrast ratio, generalized contrast-to-noise ratio, and FWHM demonstrate that the proposed higher-order DMAS beamformer is superior in PA image reconstruction. Conclusively, the proposed beamformer uniquely facilitates real-time PA image reconstruction with an achievable frame rate close to DAS and DMAS but with better imaging performance, which holds promise for real-time PA imaging and its clinical applications.

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          Most cited references37

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          Photoacoustic tomography: in vivo imaging from organelles to organs.

          Photoacoustic tomography (PAT) can create multiscale multicontrast images of living biological structures ranging from organelles to organs. This emerging technology overcomes the high degree of scattering of optical photons in biological tissue by making use of the photoacoustic effect. Light absorption by molecules creates a thermally induced pressure jump that launches ultrasonic waves, which are received by acoustic detectors to form images. Different implementations of PAT allow the spatial resolution to be scaled with the desired imaging depth in tissue while a high depth-to-resolution ratio is maintained. As a rule of thumb, the achievable spatial resolution is on the order of 1/200 of the desired imaging depth, which can reach up to 7 centimeters. PAT provides anatomical, functional, metabolic, molecular, and genetic contrasts of vasculature, hemodynamics, oxygen metabolism, biomarkers, and gene expression. We review the state of the art of PAT for both biological and clinical studies and discuss future prospects.
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            Is Open Access

            A review of clinical photoacoustic imaging: Current and future trends

            Photoacoustic imaging (or optoacoustic imaging) is an upcoming biomedical imaging modality availing the benefits of optical resolution and acoustic depth of penetration. With its capacity to offer structural, functional, molecular and kinetic information making use of either endogenous contrast agents like hemoglobin, lipid, melanin and water or a variety of exogenous contrast agents or both, PAI has demonstrated promising potential in a wide range of preclinical and clinical applications. This review provides an overview of the rapidly expanding clinical applications of photoacoustic imaging including breast imaging, dermatologic imaging, vascular imaging, carotid artery imaging, musculoskeletal imaging, gastrointestinal imaging and adipose tissue imaging and the future directives utilizing different configurations of photoacoustic imaging. Particular emphasis is placed on investigations performed on human or human specimens.
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              k-Wave: MATLAB toolbox for the simulation and reconstruction of photoacoustic wave fields.

              A new, freely available third party MATLAB toolbox for the simulation and reconstruction of photoacoustic wave fields is described. The toolbox, named k-Wave, is designed to make realistic photoacoustic modeling simple and fast. The forward simulations are based on a k-space pseudo-spectral time domain solution to coupled first-order acoustic equations for homogeneous or heterogeneous media in one, two, and three dimensions. The simulation functions can additionally be used as a flexible time reversal image reconstruction algorithm for an arbitrarily shaped measurement surface. A one-step image reconstruction algorithm for a planar detector geometry based on the fast Fourier transform (FFT) is also included. The architecture and use of the toolbox are described, and several novel modeling examples are given. First, the use of data interpolation is shown to considerably improve time reversal reconstructions when the measurement surface has only a sparse array of detector points. Second, by comparison with one-step, FFT-based reconstruction, time reversal is shown to be sufficiently general that it can also be used for finite-sized planar measurement surfaces. Last, the optimization of computational speed is demonstrated through parallel execution using a graphics processing unit.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
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                Journal
                JOAOD6
                Journal of the Optical Society of America A
                J. Opt. Soc. Am. A
                Optica Publishing Group
                1084-7529
                1520-8532
                2022
                2022
                September 14 2022
                October 01 2022
                : 39
                : 10
                : 1805
                Article
                10.1364/JOSAA.461323
                dab77914-d34c-4270-b5d0-966d9e71f249
                © 2022

                https://doi.org/10.1364/OA_License_v2#VOR

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