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Respiratory motion correction for liver contrast-enhanced ultrasound by automatic selection of a reference image.

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PURPOSE Respiratory motion correction is necessary for the quantitative analysis of liver contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) image sequences. Most respiratory motion correction methods are based on the dual mode of CEUS… Click to show full abstract

PURPOSE Respiratory motion correction is necessary for the quantitative analysis of liver contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) image sequences. Most respiratory motion correction methods are based on the dual mode of CEUS image sequences, including contrast and grayscale image sequences. Due to free-breathing motion, the acquired 2-dimensional (2D) ultrasound cine might show the in-plane and out-of-plane motion of tumors. The registration of an entire 2D ultrasound contrast image sequence based on out-of-plane images is ineffective. For the respiratory motion correction of CEUS sequences, the reference image is usually considered the standard for the deletion of any out-of-plane images. Most methods used for the selection of the reference image are subjective in nature. Here, a quantitative method for the selection of an optimal reference image from CEUS image sequences in the B and contrast modes was explored. METHODS The original high-dimensional ultrasound grayscale image data were mapped into a two-dimensional space using Laplacian Eigenmaps (LE), and K-means clustering was adopted. The center image of the larger cluster with a near-peak contrast intensity was considered the optimal ultrasound reference image. In the ultrasound grayscale image sequence, the images with the maximum correlations to the reference image in the same time interval were selected as the corrected image sequence. The effectiveness of this proposed method was then validated on 18 CEUS cases of VX2 tumors in rabbit livers. RESULTS Correction smoothed the time-intensity curves (TICs) extracted from the region of interest of the CEUS image sequences. Before correction, the average of the total mean structural similarity (TMSSIM) and the average of the mean correlation coefficient (MCC) from the image sequences were 0.45±0.11 and 0.67±0.16, respectively, and after correction, the average TMSSIM and MCC increased (P<0.001) by 31% to 0.59±0.11 and by 21% to 0.81±0.11, respectively. The average deviation value (DV) index of the TICs from the image sequences prior to correction was 92.16±18.12, and correction reduced the average to 31.71±7.31. The average TMSSIM and MCC values after correction using the mean frame of the reference image (MBMFRI) were clearly lower than those after correction using the proposed method (P<0.001). Moreover, the average DV after correction using the MBMFRI was obviously higher than that after correction using the proposed method (P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS The breathing frequency of rabbits is notably faster than that of human beings, but the proposed correction method could reduce the effect of the respiratory motion in the CEUS image sequences. The reference image was selected quantitatively, which could improve the accuracy of the quantitative analysis of rabbit liver CEUS sequences using the reference image method based on the current standard of manual selection and the MBMFRI. This easy-to-operate method can potentially be used in both animal studies and clinical applications. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Keywords: motion; image; correction; image sequences; reference image

Journal Title: Medical physics
Year Published: 2019

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