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- A Special Collection of Papers from the 25th European Symposium on Ultrasound Contrast Imaging
- Tang, Meng-XingRemove Tang, Meng-Xing filter
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Author
- Bosch, Johan G1
- Christensen-Jeffries, Kirsten1
- Couture, Olivier1
- Dayton, Paul A1
- Eldar, Yonina C1
- Freear, Steven1
- Groot Jebbink, Erik1
- Hynynen, Kullervo1
- Kiessling, Fabian1
- Leow, Chee Hau1
- Nie, Luzhen1
- O'Reilly, Meaghan1
- Pinton, Gianmarco F1
- Schmitz, Georg1
- Tanter, Mickael1
- van den Bosch, Annemien E1
- van Sloun, Ruud JG1
- Voorneveld, Jason D1
- Vos, Hendrik J1
A Special Collection of Papers from the 25th European Symposium on Ultrasound Contrast Imaging
2 Results
- Review ArticleOpen Access
Contrast-Enhanced High-Frame-Rate Ultrasound Imaging of Flow Patterns in Cardiac Chambers and Deep Vessels
Ultrasound in Medicine and BiologyVol. 46Issue 11p2875–2890Published online: August 22, 2020- Hendrik J. Vos
- Jason D. Voorneveld
- Erik Groot Jebbink
- Chee Hau Leow
- Luzhen Nie
- Annemien E. van den Bosch
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 12Cardiac function and vascular function are closely related to the flow of blood within. The flow velocities in these larger cavities easily reach 1 m/s, and generally complex spatiotemporal flow patterns are involved, especially in a non-physiologic state. Visualization of such flow patterns using ultrasound can be greatly enhanced by administration of contrast agents. Tracking the high-velocity complex flows is challenging with current clinical echographic tools, mostly because of limitations in signal-to-noise ratio; estimation of lateral velocities; and/or frame rate of the contrast-enhanced imaging mode. - Review Article
Super-resolution Ultrasound Imaging
Ultrasound in Medicine and BiologyVol. 46Issue 4p865–891Published online: January 20, 2020- Kirsten Christensen-Jeffries
- Olivier Couture
- Paul A. Dayton
- Yonina C. Eldar
- Kullervo Hynynen
- Fabian Kiessling
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 158The majority of exchanges of oxygen and nutrients are performed around vessels smaller than 100 μm, allowing cells to thrive everywhere in the body. Pathologies such as cancer, diabetes and arteriosclerosis can profoundly alter the microvasculature. Unfortunately, medical imaging modalities only provide indirect observation at this scale. Inspired by optical microscopy, ultrasound localization microscopy has bypassed the classic compromise between penetration and resolution in ultrasonic imaging.