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New 3D Ultrasound Technology Could Improve Diagnosis and Care of Stroke Patients

By MedImaging staff writers
Posted on 19 May 2008
Utilizing three-dimensional (3D) ultrasound technology they designed, bioengineers can now compensate for the thickness and unevenness of the skull to see in real time the arteries within the brain that most frequently become blocked and cause strokes.

The researchers believe that these advances will ultimately improve the treatment of stroke patients, whether by giving emergency medical technicians (EMTs) the ability to rapidly scan the heads of potential stroke victims while in the ambulance, or allowing physicians to easily monitor in real time the patients' response to therapy at the bedside.

The results of the latest studies were reported online in April 2008 the journal Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology. "To our knowledge, this is the first time that real-time 3D ultrasound provided clear images of the major arteries within the brain,” said Dr. Nikolas Ivancevich, graduate student in Duke University's (Durham, NC, USA) Pratt School of Engineering and first author of the study. "Also for the first time, we have been able overcome the most challenging aspect of using ultrasound to scan the brain--the skull.”

The Duke laboratory, led by biomedical engineering professor Dr. Stephen Smith, has a long record of modifying traditional 2D ultrasound--similar to that used to image babies in utero--into more advanced 3D scans, which can provide more detailed information. After inventing the technique in 1991, the team has demonstrated its utility in developing specialized catheters and endoscopes for imaging the heart and blood vessels.

"This is an important step forward for scanning the vessels of the brain through the skull, and we believe that there are now no major technological barriers to ultimately using 3D ultrasound to quickly diagnose stroke patients,” said Dr. Smith, senior author of the study.

"I think it's safe to say that within five to 10 years, the technology will be miniaturized to the point where EMTs in an ambulance can scan the brain of a stroke patient and transmit the results ahead to the hospital,” Dr. Smith continued. "Speed is important because the only approved medical treatment for stroke must be given within three hours of the first symptoms.”

Ultrasound devices emit sound waves and then create images by calculating the angle of the waves as they bounce back. For their experiments, the Duke team evaluated 17 healthy people. After injecting them with a contrast dye to enhance the images, the researchers aimed ultrasound transducers into the brain from three vantage points--the temples on each side of the head and upwards from the base of the neck. The temple locations were chosen because the skull is thinnest at these points.

Dr. Ivancevich took this approach one step further to compensate for the thickness and unevenness of the skull in one study participant. "The speed of the sound waves is faster in bone than it is in soft tissue, so we took measurements to better understand how the bone alters the movement of sound waves,” Dr. Ivancevich explained. "With this knowledge, we were able to program the computer to ‘correct' for the skull's interference, resulting in even clearer images of the arteries.”

The key to obtaining these images lies in the design of the transducer. In conventional 2D ultrasound, the sound is emitted by a row of sensors. In the new design, the sensors are arranged in a checkerboard manner, allowing compensation for the skull's thickness over a whole area, instead of a single line.

The 3D ultrasound has the advantage of being less expensive and faster than the traditional methods of assessing blood flow in the brain--magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or computed tomography (CT) scanning, according to Dr. Ivancevich. Although 3D ultrasound will not totally displace MRI or CT scans, he reported that the new technology would give physicians more flexibility in treating their patients.


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