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      Assessing cardiac stiffness using ultrasound shear wave elastography

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      Physics in Medicine & Biology
      IOP Publishing

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          Abstract

          Shear wave elastography offers a new dimension to echocardiography: it measures myocardial stiffness. Therefore, it could provide additional insights into the pathophysiology of cardiac diseases affecting myocardial stiffness and potentially improve diagnosis or guide patient treatment. The technique detects fast mechanical waves on the heart wall with high frame rate echography, and converts their propagation speed into a stiffness value. A proper interpretation of shear wave data is required as the shear wave interacts with the intrinsic, yet dynamically changing geometrical and material characteristics of the heart under pressure. This dramatically alters the wave physics of the propagating wave, demanding adapted processing methods compared to other shear wave elastography applications as breast tumor and liver stiffness staging. Furthermore, several advanced analysis methods have been proposed to extract supplementary material features such as viscosity and anisotropy, potentially offering additional diagnostic value. This review explains the general mechanical concepts underlying cardiac shear wave elastography and provides an overview of the preclinical and clinical studies within the field. We also identify the mechanical and technical challenges ahead to make shear wave elastography a valuable tool for clinical practice.

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          The stiffness of living tissues and its implications for tissue engineering

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            Is Open Access

            Ultrasound Elastography: Review of Techniques and Clinical Applications

            Elastography-based imaging techniques have received substantial attention in recent years for non-invasive assessment of tissue mechanical properties. These techniques take advantage of changed soft tissue elasticity in various pathologies to yield qualitative and quantitative information that can be used for diagnostic purposes. Measurements are acquired in specialized imaging modes that can detect tissue stiffness in response to an applied mechanical force (compression or shear wave). Ultrasound-based methods are of particular interest due to its many inherent advantages, such as wide availability including at the bedside and relatively low cost. Several ultrasound elastography techniques using different excitation methods have been developed. In general, these can be classified into strain imaging methods that use internal or external compression stimuli, and shear wave imaging that use ultrasound-generated traveling shear wave stimuli. While ultrasound elastography has shown promising results for non-invasive assessment of liver fibrosis, new applications in breast, thyroid, prostate, kidney and lymph node imaging are emerging. Here, we review the basic principles, foundation physics, and limitations of ultrasound elastography and summarize its current clinical use and ongoing developments in various clinical applications.
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              Elastography: A Quantitative Method for Imaging the Elasticity of Biological Tissues

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Physics in Medicine & Biology
                Phys. Med. Biol.
                IOP Publishing
                0031-9155
                1361-6560
                January 17 2022
                January 21 2022
                January 17 2022
                January 21 2022
                : 67
                : 2
                : 02TR01
                Article
                10.1088/1361-6560/ac404d
                a317400c-e30c-47de-9641-fd359b44d15c
                © 2022

                https://iopscience.iop.org/page/copyright

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