View : 300 Download: 0

Vascular wall motion detection models based on long short-term memory in plane-wave-based ultrasound imaging

Title
Vascular wall motion detection models based on long short-term memory in plane-wave-based ultrasound imaging
Authors
Seo J.Nguon L.S.Park S.
Ewha Authors
박수현
SCOPUS Author ID
박수현scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
Physics in Medicine and Biology
ISSN
0031-9155JCR Link
Citation
Physics in Medicine and Biology vol. 68, no. 7
Keywords
convolutional long short-term memorylong short-term memoryultrasoundvascular wall tracking
Publisher
Institute of Physics
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Objective. Vascular wall motion can be used to diagnose cardiovascular diseases. In this study, long short-term memory (LSTM) neural networks were used to track vascular wall motion in plane-wave-based ultrasound imaging. Approach. The proposed LSTM and convolutional LSTM (ConvLSTM) models were trained using ultrasound data from simulations and tested experimentally using a tissue-mimicking vascular phantom and an in vivo study using a carotid artery. The performance of the models in the simulation was evaluated using the mean square error from axial and lateral motions and compared with the cross-correlation (XCorr) method. Statistical analysis was performed using the Bland-Altman plot, Pearson correlation coefficient, and linear regression in comparison with the manually annotated ground truth. Main results. For the in vivo data, the median error and 95% limit of agreement from the Bland-Altman analysis were (0.01, 0.13), (0.02, 0.19), and (0.03, 0.18), the Pearson correlation coefficients were 0.97, 0.94, and 0.94, respectively, and the linear equations were 0.89x + 0.02, 0.84x + 0.03, and 0.88x + 0.03 from linear regression for the ConvLSTM model, LSTM model, and XCorr method, respectively. In the longitudinal and transverse views of the carotid artery, the LSTM-based models outperformed the XCorr method. Overall, the ConvLSTM model was superior to the LSTM model and XCorr method. Significance. This study demonstrated that vascular wall motion can be tracked accurately and precisely using plane-wave-based ultrasound imaging and the proposed LSTM-based models. © 2023 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.
DOI
10.1088/1361-6560/acc238
Appears in Collections:
공과대학 > 전자전기공학전공 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE