TY - JOUR
T1 - Acceleration of reconstruction for compressed sensing based synthetic transmit aperture imaging by using in-phase/quadrature data
AU - Zhang, Jingke
AU - Wang, Yuanyuan
AU - Liu, Jing
AU - He, Qiong
AU - Wang, Rui
AU - Liao, Hongen
AU - Luo, Jianwen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2021/1
Y1 - 2021/1
N2 - Compressed sensing-based synthetic transmit aperture (CS-STA) was previously proposed to recover the full radio-frequency (RF) channel dataset of synthetic transmit aperture (STA) from that of a smaller number of randomly apodized plane wave (PW) transmissions. In this way, the imaging frame rate (FR) and contrast are improved with maintained spatial resolution, compared with those of STA. Because CS-STA reconstruction is repeated for all receive elements and RF samples (with a high sampling frequency), the recovery of STA dataset in RF domain is time-consuming. In the meantime, a large amount of RF data needs to be transferred and stored, resulting in an increase of system complexity and required memory space. In this study, CS-STA is extended to in-phase/quadrature (IQ) domain (with lower sampling frequency) for the recovery of baseband STA IQ dataset to accelerate the CS-STA reconstruction by reducing the amount of data to be processed. More importantly, CS-STA reconstruction using IQ data is of practical importance, as clinical ultrasound systems typically record baseband IQ signal instead of RF signal. Simulations, phantom and in vivo experiments verify the feasibility of CS-STA in IQ domain for the recovery of STA dataset. More specifically, CS-STA using IQ data achieves similar image quality and appreciably improves reconstruction speed (by ∼3 times) compared with that using RF data. These findings demonstrate that IQ-domain CS-STA is capable of relieving the computational and storage burdens, which may facilitate the implementation of CS-STA in practical ultrasound systems.
AB - Compressed sensing-based synthetic transmit aperture (CS-STA) was previously proposed to recover the full radio-frequency (RF) channel dataset of synthetic transmit aperture (STA) from that of a smaller number of randomly apodized plane wave (PW) transmissions. In this way, the imaging frame rate (FR) and contrast are improved with maintained spatial resolution, compared with those of STA. Because CS-STA reconstruction is repeated for all receive elements and RF samples (with a high sampling frequency), the recovery of STA dataset in RF domain is time-consuming. In the meantime, a large amount of RF data needs to be transferred and stored, resulting in an increase of system complexity and required memory space. In this study, CS-STA is extended to in-phase/quadrature (IQ) domain (with lower sampling frequency) for the recovery of baseband STA IQ dataset to accelerate the CS-STA reconstruction by reducing the amount of data to be processed. More importantly, CS-STA reconstruction using IQ data is of practical importance, as clinical ultrasound systems typically record baseband IQ signal instead of RF signal. Simulations, phantom and in vivo experiments verify the feasibility of CS-STA in IQ domain for the recovery of STA dataset. More specifically, CS-STA using IQ data achieves similar image quality and appreciably improves reconstruction speed (by ∼3 times) compared with that using RF data. These findings demonstrate that IQ-domain CS-STA is capable of relieving the computational and storage burdens, which may facilitate the implementation of CS-STA in practical ultrasound systems.
KW - Compressed sensing
KW - In-phase/quadrature data
KW - Reconstruction acceleration
KW - Synthetic transmit aperture
KW - Ultrasound imaging
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85114826899
U2 - 10.1016/j.ultras.2021.106576
DO - 10.1016/j.ultras.2021.106576
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85114826899
SN - 0041-624X
VL - 118
JO - Ultrasonics
JF - Ultrasonics
M1 - 106576
ER -