4D microvascular imaging based on ultrafast Doppler tomography

Neuroimage. 2016 Feb 15:127:472-483. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.11.014. Epub 2015 Nov 10.

Abstract

4D ultrasound microvascular imaging was demonstrated by applying ultrafast Doppler tomography (UFD-T) to the imaging of brain hemodynamics in rodents. In vivo real-time imaging of the rat brain was performed using ultrasonic plane wave transmissions at very high frame rates (18,000 frames per second). Such ultrafast frame rates allow for highly sensitive and wide-field-of-view 2D Doppler imaging of blood vessels far beyond conventional ultrasonography. Voxel anisotropy (100 μm × 100 μm × 500 μm) was corrected for by using a tomographic approach, which consisted of ultrafast acquisitions repeated for different imaging plane orientations over multiple cardiac cycles. UFT-D allows for 4D dynamic microvascular imaging of deep-seated vasculature (up to 20 mm) with a very high 4D resolution (respectively 100 μm × 100 μm × 100 μm and 10 ms) and high sensitivity to flow in small vessels (>1 mm/s) for a whole-brain imaging technique without requiring any contrast agent. 4D ultrasound microvascular imaging in vivo could become a valuable tool for the study of brain hemodynamics, such as cerebral flow autoregulation or vascular remodeling after ischemic stroke recovery, and, more generally, tumor vasculature response to therapeutic treatment.

Keywords: 3D rat brain; Blood flow; Microvascular imaging; Tomography; Ultrafast Doppler; Ultrasound imaging; Wiener filter.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Brain / blood supply*
  • Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional / methods
  • Neuroimaging / methods*
  • Rats
  • Rats, Sprague-Dawley
  • Tomography, X-Ray Computed
  • Ultrasonography, Doppler / methods*