Visibility of Bioresorbable Vascular Scaffold in Intravascular Ultrasound Imaging

Taewon Choi, Hwanseung Yu, Seoyun Chang, Dong Heon Ha, Dong Woo Cho, Jinah Jang, Changyang Lee, Gengxi Lu, Jin Ho Chang, Qifa Zhou, Jinhyoung Park

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS) has recently been spotlighted for its unique characteristics of absorbing into blood vessels and eventually disappearing. Although intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is the most common guiding tool for stent deployment, the echogenicity of BVS struts has changed as the center of stent lumen and scanning rotation is not concentric, which may cause a critical erroneous measurement in practice. This study investigated the physical conditions for dimming the stent brightness in IVUS images using a finite-difference method (FDM) to numerically solve acoustic wave propagation through nonhomogeneous medium. The dimmed brightness is caused by an angled rectangular cross section of a strut and its similar acoustic impedance with water. Imaging frequency is not a major cause. However, the angle between the acoustic beam and the BVS surface is the major cause of the dimmed brightness. As a solution, an approach using a frequency compounding method with signal polarity comparator was proposed to recover the reduced brightness without sacrificing spatial resolutions. Based on the simulation study, the signal level from BVS can be attenuated down by 17 dB when the angle between the acoustic beamline and the surface of BVS is more than 45°. With the proposed frequency compounding approach, the reduced signal can be recovered by 6 dB. In the experimental BVS IVUS imaging, strut brightness was reduced by 18 dB with an angled strut position and recovered by 5 dB with the proposed frequency compounding method. A pig coronary was imaged to demonstrate the performance of the proposed method.

Original languageEnglish
Article number8951060
Pages (from-to)1090-1101
Number of pages12
JournalIEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control
Volume67
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 1986-2012 IEEE.

Keywords

  • Bioresorbable vascular scaffold (BVS)
  • finite-difference method (FDM)
  • intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)
  • ultrasound propagation

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