The signal backscattered by blood cells crossing a sample volume produces a Doppler power spectrum determined by the scatterers’ velocity distribution. Several methods have been proposed for estimating the maximum velocity component – an important clinical parameter – but these methods are approximate solutions based on heuristic thresholds applied to the Doppler power spectrum. Reported here is a modeling of the Doppler power spectrum by the distribution of scatterer velocities; the resulting model provides the location of the peak velocity in terms of a threshold applied to the descending slope of the power spectrum. In particular it is shown that, for a parabolic velocity distribution, the peak velocity corresponds to the half-power point. This result is verified experimentally using Doppler spectra obtained from a sample volume intercepting laminar flows of peak velocity from ~ 7 – 20 cm/s. Peak velocities obtained from the half-slope frequency of the measured Doppler spectra show an error with + 0.3% bias and 1.5% standard deviation, suggesting this is an accurate model.
Determining the Peak Velocity in a Blood Flow from its Doppler Spectrum / Ricci, Stefano; Tortoli, Piero; Vilkomerson, D.. - ELETTRONICO. - (2011), pp. 276-279. (Intervento presentato al convegno 2011 Ultrasonics Symposium tenutosi a Orlando nel ottobre 2011) [10.1109/ULTSYM.2011.0066].
Determining the Peak Velocity in a Blood Flow from its Doppler Spectrum
RICCI, STEFANO;TORTOLI, PIERO;
2011
Abstract
The signal backscattered by blood cells crossing a sample volume produces a Doppler power spectrum determined by the scatterers’ velocity distribution. Several methods have been proposed for estimating the maximum velocity component – an important clinical parameter – but these methods are approximate solutions based on heuristic thresholds applied to the Doppler power spectrum. Reported here is a modeling of the Doppler power spectrum by the distribution of scatterer velocities; the resulting model provides the location of the peak velocity in terms of a threshold applied to the descending slope of the power spectrum. In particular it is shown that, for a parabolic velocity distribution, the peak velocity corresponds to the half-power point. This result is verified experimentally using Doppler spectra obtained from a sample volume intercepting laminar flows of peak velocity from ~ 7 – 20 cm/s. Peak velocities obtained from the half-slope frequency of the measured Doppler spectra show an error with + 0.3% bias and 1.5% standard deviation, suggesting this is an accurate model.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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