Deep-Learning Based Adaptive Ultrasound Imaging from Sub-Nyquist Channel Data

6 Aug 2020  ·  Alon Mamistvalov, Ariel Amar, Naama Kessler, Yonina C. Eldar ·

Traditional beamforming of medical ultrasound images relies on sampling rates significantly higher than the actual Nyquist rate of the received signals. This results in large amounts of data to store and process, imposing hardware and software challenges on the development of ultrasound machinery and algorithms, and impacting the resulting performance. In light of the capabilities demonstrated by deep learning methods over the past years across a variety of fields, including medical imaging, it is natural to consider their ability to recover high-quality ultrasound images from partial data. Here, we propose an approach for deep-learning based reconstruction of B-mode images from temporally and spatially sub-sampled channel data. We begin by considering sub-Nyquist sampled data, time-aligned in the frequency domain and transformed back to the time domain. The data is further sampled spatially, so that only a subset of the received signals is acquired. The partial data is used to train an encoder-decoder convolutional neural network, using as targets minimum-variance (MV) beamformed signals that were generated from the original, fully-sampled data. Our approach yields high-quality B-mode images, with higher resolution than previously proposed reconstruction approaches (NESTA) from compressed data as well as delay-and-sum beamforming (DAS) of the fully-sampled data. In terms of contrast to noise ratio, our results are comparable to MV beamforming of the fully-sampled data, thus enabling better and more efficient imaging than is mostly used in clinical practice today.

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