Wall filter for ultrasonic mitral regurgitation analysis

US10398407B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10398407-B2
Application numberUS-201113994923-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateDec 15, 2011
Priority dateDec 23, 2010
Publication dateSep 3, 2019
Grant dateSep 3, 2019

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Abstract

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An ultrasonic diagnostic imaging system is described which quantifies regurgitant flow through a mitral valve. Echo signals received by an ultrasound probe ( 10 ) are used to produce an image of a regurgitant flow region, and are processed by a wall filter having a response characteristic which peaks at an intermediate sampling rate between zero and the Nyquist limits. This response characteristic is thus highly sensitive to lower flow rates which may be anticipated in a flow velocity field proximal a regurgitant orifice. Echo signals passed by the wall filter are Doppler processed and used to quantify the flow through the regurgitant orifice.

First claim

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The invention claimed is: 1. A diagnostic ultrasound system for measuring regurgitant flow comprising: an ultrasound probe having a transducer array for transmitting ultrasonic energy to and receiving ultrasonic echoes from a location of regurgitant flow in a body; an image processor, responsive to received echoes, for producing an ultrasound image of the location of regurgitant flow; a wall filter, responsive to received echoes, having a response characteristic extending from zero to Nyquist limits of ±1, the response characteristic consisting of one maximum response above ½ Nyquist in the range of ½ to ⅔ of Nyquist, wherein the response characteristic continually increases from zero to the maximum response; a Doppler processor responsive to echo signals passed by the wall filter for producing Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity in the vicinity of the location of regurgitant flow; a flow quantification processor configured to refine a predicted location of a regurgitant orifice by iteratively adjusting a flow velocity field model in response to the Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity and produce a measurement of a flow velocity field in the vicinity of the location of regurgitant flow, wherein iteratively adjusting the flow velocity field model comprises: generating predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity; adjusting the predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity by weighing a non-zero Doppler angle, adjusting the response characteristic of the wall filter to correct a wall filter bias, correcting a detected spectral spread, and/or reducing an aliasing effect; and comparing the predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements with the Doppler ultrasound measurements produced by the Doppler processor wherein the flow velocity field model is iteratively adjusted until the predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements converge with the Doppler ultrasound measurements produced by the Doppler processor; and a display device, coupled to the image processor and the flow quantification processor, for displaying the ultrasound image of the location of regurgitant flow and a flow measurement derived from the flow quantification processor measurement. 2. The diagnostic ultrasound system of claim 1 , wherein the response characteristic of the wall filter drops to a response of zero at the Nyquist limits. 3. The diagnostic ultrasound system of claim 1 , wherein the Doppler processor is further responsive to echo signals received from a flow velocity field proximal the regurgitant orifice. 4. The diagnostic ultrasound system of claim 3 , wherein the flow velocity field further comprises a two dimensional acceptance zone with a center of rotation at the regurgitant orifice. 5. The diagnostic ultrasound system of claim 4 , wherein the two dimensional acceptance zone is arcuate in shape having a center of curvature substantially at the location of the regurgitant orifice. 6. The diagnostic ultrasound system of claim 3 , wherein the flow velocity field further comprises a three dimensional acceptance zone centered at the regurgitant orifice. 7. The diagnostic ultrasound system of claim 6 , wherein the three dimensional acceptance zone is hemispherical in shape having a center of curvature substantially at the location of the regurgitant orifice. 8. A method for measuring regurgitant flow, the method comprising: transmit ultrasonic energy to and receive ultrasonic echoes from a location of regurgitant flow in a body using an ultrasound probe; in response to received echoes, produce an ultrasound image of the location of regurgitant flow; filter the received echoes using a wall filter, wherein the wall filter has a response characteristic extending from zero to Nyquist limits of ±1, the response characteristic consisting of one maximum response above ½ Nyquist in the range of ½ to ⅔ of Nyquist, wherein the response characteristic continually increases from zero to the maximum response; using received echoes filtered by the wall filter, produce Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity in the vicinity of the location of regurgitant flow; refine a predicted location of a regurgitant orifice by iteratively adjusting a flow velocity field model in response to the Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity and produce a measurement of a flow velocity field in the vicinity of the location of regurgitant flow, wherein iteratively adjusting the flow velocity field model comprises: generating predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity; adjusting the predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity by weighing a non-zero Doppler angle, adjusting the response characteristic of the wall filter to correct a wall filter bias, correcting a detected spectral spread, and/or reducing an aliasing effect; and comparing the predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity with the Doppler ultrasound measurements of blood flow velocity produced by the Doppler processor wherein the flow velocity field model is iteratively adjusted until the predicted Doppler ultrasound measurements converge with the Doppler ultrasound measurements produced by the Doppler processor; and display the ultrasound image of the location of regurgitant flow and a flow measurement derived from the measurement of the flow velocity field. 9. The method of claim 8 , wherein the response characteristic of the wall filter drops to a response of zero at the Nyquist limits. 10. The method of claim 8 , wherein the flow velocity field further comprises a two dimensional acceptance zone with a center of rotation at the regurgitant orifice. 11. The method of claim 10 , wherein the two dimensional acceptance zone is arcuate in shape having a center of curvature substantially at the location of the regurgitant orifice. 12. The method of claim 8 , wherein the flow velocity field further comprises a three dimensional acceptance zone centered at the regurgitant orifice. 13. The method of claim 12 , wherein the three dimensional acceptance zone is hemispherical in shape having a center of curvature substantially at the location of the regurgitant orifice.

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Classifications

  • for calculating health indices; for individual health risk assessment · CPC title

  • Combined Doppler and pulse-echo imaging systems · CPC title

  • Multicolour displays; using colour coding; Optimising colour or information content in displays, e.g. parametric imaging · CPC title

  • Tomography (A61B8/10, A61B8/12 take precedence) · CPC title

  • for diagnosis of the heart · CPC title

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What does patent US10398407B2 cover?
An ultrasonic diagnostic imaging system is described which quantifies regurgitant flow through a mitral valve. Echo signals received by an ultrasound probe ( 10 ) are used to produce an image of a regurgitant flow region, and are processed by a wall filter having a response characteristic which peaks at an intermediate sampling rate between zero and the Nyquist limits. This response characteris…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Wei Qifeng, Thiele Karl, Koninklijke Philips Nv
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification A61B8/06. Mapped technology areas include Human Necessities.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Sep 03 2019 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).