Browsing by Author "Paul, Abhijit"
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Publication Characterizing Viscoelastic Polyvinyl Alcohol Phantoms for Ultrasound Elastography(2023-02-01) ;Sharma, Ananya ;Marapureddy, Sai Geetha ;Paul, Abhijit ;Bisht, Sapna R. ;Kakkar, Manik; ; ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology GandhinagarIndian Institute of Technology GandhinagarUltrasound phantoms mimic the acoustic and mechanical properties of native tissues. Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) phantoms are used extensively as models for validating ultrasound elastography approaches. However, the viscous properties of PVA phantoms have not been investigated adequately. Glycerol is a viscous liquid that has been reported to increase the speed of sound of phantoms. This study aims to assess the acoustic and viscoelastic properties of PVA phantoms and PVA mixed with glycerol at varying concentrations. The phantoms were fabricated with 10% w/v PVA in water with varying concentrations of glycerol (10%, 15% and 20% v/v) and 2% w/v silicon carbide particles as acoustic scatterers. The phantoms were subjected to either one, two, or three 24-h freeze–thaw cycles. The longitudinal sound speeds of all PVA phantoms were measured, and ranged from 1529 to 1660 m/s. Attenuation spectroscopy was performed in the range of 5 to 20 MHz. The measured attenuation followed a power-law relationship with frequency, wherein the power-law fit constants and exponents ranged from 0.02 to 0.1 dB/cm/MHzn and from 1.6 to 1.9, respectively. These results were in agreement with previous reports for soft tissues. Viscoelasticity of PVA phantoms was assessed using rheometry. The estimated values of shear modulus and viscosity using the Kelvin–Voigt and Kelvin–Voigt fractional derivative models were within the range of previously-reported tissue-mimicking phantoms and soft tissues. The number of freeze-thaw cycles were shown to alter the viscosity of PVA phantoms, even in the absence of glycerol. Scanning electron microscopy images of PVA phantoms without glycerol showed a porous hydrogel network, in contrast to those of PVA-glycerol phantoms with non-porous structure. Phantoms fabricated in this study possess tunable acoustic and viscoelastic properties within the range reported for healthy and diseased soft tissues. This study demonstrates that PVA phantoms can be manufactured with glycerol for applications in ultrasound elastography.Scopus© Citations 25 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication NUMERICAL ANALYSIS OF LASER INTERSTITIAL THERMAL THERAPY FOR GLIOBLASTOMA(2022-03-01) ;Mitra, Kunal ;Paul, Abhijit ;Florida Institute of TechnologyIndian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Pulsed Ultrasound Assisted Thermo-Therapy for Subsurface Tumor Ablation: A Numerical Investigation(2021-08-01) ;Singh, Gajendra ;Paul, Abhijit; ;Paul, Anup ;National Institute of Technology, Arunachal Pradesh ;National Institute of Technology, Arunachal Pradesh ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;National Institute of Technology, Arunachal Pradesh ;Indian Institute of Technology GandhinagarNational Institute of Technology, Arunachal PradeshHigh-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) is a promising therapy for thermal ablation and hyperthermia, characterized by its non-invasiveness and high penetration depth. Effective HIFU thermo-Therapy requires the ability to accurately predict temperature elevation and corresponding thermal dose distribution in target tissues. We report a parametric numerical study of the thermal response and corresponding of thermal dose in a soft tissue in response to ultrasound. We compared the predictions of tissue models with two, three, and seven layers, to ultrasound-induced heating at duty cycles ranging from 0.6 and 0.9. Further, two tumor sizes and transducer powers (10 W and 15 W) were considered. The inhomogeneous Helmholtz equation was coupled with the Pennes bio-heat equation to predict heating in response to pulsed ultrasound. Necrotic lesion size was calculated using the cumulative equivalent minute (CEM) thermal dose function. In-vitro experiments were performed with agar-based tissue phantoms as a preliminary validation of the numerical results. The simulations conducted with the seven-layered model predicted up to 33.5% lower peak pressure amplitude than the three-layered model. As the ultrasound pulse width decreased with the equivalent sonication time fixed, the corresponding magnitude of the peak temperature and the rate of temperature rise decreased. Pulsed ultrasound resulted in the increased volume of necrotic lesions for an equivalent time of sonication. The findings of this study highlight the dependence of HIFU-induced heating on target geometry and acoustic properties and could help guide the choice of suitable ultrasound exposure parameters for further studies.Scopus© Citations 9 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Pulsed ultrasound assisted thermo-therapy for subsurface tumor ablation: a numerical investigation(Cornell University Library, 2020-07-01) ;Singh, Gajendra ;Paul, Anup ;Shekhar, Himanshu ;Paul, Abhijit ;Singh, Gajendra ;Paul, Anup; Paul, Abhijit - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Quantifying tethered spinal cord tension: ultrasound elastography results from computational, cadaveric, and intraoperative first-in-human studies(Research Square Company, 2023-06-01) ;Kerensky, Max ;Paul, Abhijit ;Routkevitch, Denis ;Hersh, Andrew M. ;Kempski-Leadingham, Kelley M. ;Davidar, A. Daniel ;Judy, Brendan ;Punnoose, Joshua ;Williams,Autumn ;Kumar, Avisha ;Lehner, Kurt ;Smith, Beth ;Son, Jennifer ;Azadi, Javad; ; ;Thakor, Nitish ;Theodore NicholasManbachi, AmirBackground Tension in the spinal cord is a trademark of tethered cord syndrome. Unfortunately, existing tests cannot quantify tension across the bulk of the cord, making the diagnostic evaluation of stretch ambiguous. A potential non-destructive metric for spinal cord tension is ultrasound-derived shear wave velocity (SWV). The velocity is sensitive to tissue elasticity and boundary conditions including strain. We use the term Ultrasound Tensography to describe the acoustic evaluation of tension with SWV.Methods Our solution "Tethered cord Assessment with Ultrasound Tensography (TAUT)" was utilized in three sub-studies: finite element simulations, a cadaveric benchtop validation, and a neurosurgical case series. The simulation computed SWV for given tensile forces. The induced tension cadaveric model validated the SWV-tension relationship. Lastly, SWV was measured intraoperatively in patients diagnosed with tethered cord who underwent surgical treatment (spinal column shortening). The surgery alleviates tension by decreasing the vertebral column length.Results Here we observe a strong linear relationship between tension and squared SWV across the preclinical sub-studies. Higher tension induces faster shear waves in the simulation (R2 = 0.984) and cadaveric (R2 = 0.951) models. The SWV decreases in all neurosurgical procedures (p<0.001). Moreover, TAUT has a c-statistic of 0.962 (0.92-1.00), detecting all tethered cords.Conclusions This study presents the first clinical metric of spinal cord tension. Strong agreement among computational, cadaveric, and clinical studies demonstrates the utility of ultrasound-induced SWV for quantitative intraoperative feedback. This technology is positioned to enhance tethered cord diagnosis, treatment, and post-operative monitoring as it differentiates stretched from healthy cords. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Systematic quantification of differences in shear wave elastography estimates between linear-elastic and viscoelastic material assumptions(2024-03-01) ;Bisht, Sapna R. ;Paul, Abhijit ;Patel, Panchami; ; ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology GandhinagarIndian Institute of Technology GandhinagarQuantitative, accurate, and standardized metrics are important for reliable shear wave elastography (SWE)-based biomarkers. For over two decades, the linear-elastic material assumption has been employed in SWE modes. In recent years, viscoelasticity estimation methods have been adopted in a few clinical systems. The current study aims to systematically quantify differences in SWE estimates obtained using linear-elastic and viscoelastic material assumptions. An acousto-mechanical simulation framework of acoustic radiation force impulse-based SWE was created to elucidate the effect of material viscosity and shear modulus on SWE estimates. Shear modulus estimates exhibited errors up to 72% when a numerical viscoelastic phantom was assessed as linearly elastic. Shear modulus estimates of polyvinyl alcohol phantoms between rheometry and SWE following the Kelvin-Voigt viscoelastic model assumptions were not significantly different. However, the percentage difference in shear modulus estimates between rheometry and SWE using the linear-elastic assumption was 50.1%-62.1%. In ex vivo liver, the percentage difference in shear modulus estimates between linear-elastic and viscoelastic methods was 76.1%. These findings provide a direct and systematic quantification of the potential error introduced when viscoelastic tissues are imaged with SWE following the linear-elastic assumption. This work emphasizes the need to utilize viscoelasticity estimation methods for developing robust quantitative imaging biomarkers.Scopus© Citations 9 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Tethered spinal cord tension assessed via ultrasound elastography in computational and intraoperative human studies(2024-12-01) ;Kerensky, Max J. ;Paul, Abhijit ;Routkevitch, Denis ;Hersh, Andrew M. ;Kempski Leadingham, Kelley M. ;Davidar, A. Daniel ;Judy, Brendan F. ;Punnoose, Joshua ;Williams, Autumn ;Kumar, Avisha ;Lehner, Kurt ;Smith, Beth ;Son, Jennifer K. ;Azadi, Javad R.; ; ;Thakor, Nitish V. ;Theodore, Nicholas ;Manbachi, Amir ;Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar ;Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering ;Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering ;Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical Engineering ;Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ;Whiting School of Engineering ;Johns Hopkins Department of Biomedical EngineeringIndian Institute of Technology GandhinagarBackground: Tension in the spinal cord is a trademark of tethered cord syndrome. Unfortunately, existing tests cannot quantify tension across the bulk of the cord, making the diagnostic evaluation of stretch ambiguous. A potential non-destructive metric for spinal cord tension is ultrasound-derived shear wave velocity (SWV). The velocity is sensitive to tissue elasticity and boundary conditions including strain. We use the term Ultrasound Tensography to describe the acoustic evaluation of tension with SWV. Methods: Our solution Tethered cord Assessment with Ultrasound Tensography (TAUT) was utilized in three sub-studies: finite element simulations, a cadaveric benchtop validation, and a neurosurgical case series. The simulation computed SWV for given tensile forces. The cadaveric model with induced tension validated the SWV-tension relationship. Lastly, SWV was measured intraoperatively in patients diagnosed with tethered cords who underwent treatment (spinal column shortening). The surgery alleviates tension by decreasing the vertebral column length. Results: Here we observe a strong linear relationship between tension and squared SWV across the preclinical sub-studies. Higher tension induces faster shear waves in the simulation (R2 = 0.984) and cadaveric (R2 = 0.951) models. The SWV decreases in all neurosurgical procedures (p < 0.001). Moreover, TAUT has a c-statistic of 0.962 (0.92-1.00), detecting all tethered cords. Conclusions: This study presents a physical, clinical metric of spinal cord tension. Strong agreement among computational, cadaveric, and clinical studies demonstrates the utility of ultrasound-induced SWV for quantitative intraoperative feedback. This technology is positioned to enhance tethered cord diagnosis, treatment, and postoperative monitoring as it differentiates stretched from healthy cords.Scopus© Citations 7
