Speed of sound in diseased liver observed by scanning acoustic microscopy with 80 MHz and 250 MHz. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • In this study, the speed of sound (SOS) of two types of rat livers (eight normal livers, four cirrhotic livers) was measured with a scanning acoustic microscope using two transducers, one of which had an 80-MHz and the other a 250-MHz center frequency. The 250-MHz transducer had a better spatial resolution adapted to studying fiber or hepatic parenchymal cells. In normal livers, averages of the SOS values were from 1598 to 1677 m/s at 80-MHz and from 1568 to 1668 m/s at 250-MHz. In the fiber tissue of cirrhotic livers, averages of the SOS values were from 1645 to 1658 m/s at 80-MHz and from 1610 to 1695 m/s at 250-MHz, while the SOS values in the other tissue of cirrhotic livers ranged from 1644 to 1709 m/s at 80-MHz and from 1641 to 1715 m/s at 250-MHz. In one liver, SOS in fiber tissue was larger than that of tissues without fiber while in others it was lower. The resulting two-dimensional SOS maps provide a unique quantitative insight of liver acoustic microstructures in a healthy liver and in a cirrhotic ones. This study would be helpful to understand the complex relationship between acoustic properties and liver disease including fiber tissue.

publication date

  • January 1, 2016

Research

keywords

  • Liver
  • Liver Cirrhosis
  • Sound

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84961335527

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1121/1.4940126

PubMed ID

  • 26827044

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 139

issue

  • 1