Fluids Alter Elasticity Measurements: Porous Wave Propagation Accounts for Shear Wave Dispersion in Elastography

Open access
Date
2021-09-22Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
In shear wave elastography, rotational wave speeds are converted to elasticity measures using elastodynamic theory. The method has a wide range of applications and is the gold standard for non-invasive liver fibrosis detection. However, the observed shear wave dispersion of in vivo human liver shows a mismatch with purely elastic and visco-elastic wave propagation theory. In a laboratory phantom experiment we demonstrate that porosity and fluid viscosity need to be considered to properly convert shear wave speeds to elasticity in soft porous materials. We extend this conclusion to the clinical application of liver stiffness characterization by revisiting in vivo studies of liver elastography. To that end we compare Biot’s theory of poro-visco-elastic wave propagation to Voigt’s visco-elastic model. Our results suggest that accounting for dispersion due to fluid viscosity could improve shear wave imaging in the liver and other highly vascularized organs. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000509602Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Frontiers in PhysicsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Frontiers MediaSubject
liver characterization; shear wave elastography; poroelasticity; ultrasound imaging; viscoelasticity; biot theory; shear wave dispersion; voigt modelOrganisational unit
00002 - ETH Zürich03953 - Robertsson, Johan / Robertsson, Johan
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