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Using ultrasound Nakagami imaging to assess liver fibrosis in rats
Authors:Ho Ming-Chih  Lin Jen-Jen  Shu Yu-Chen  Chen Chiung-Nien  Chang King-Jen  Chang Chien-Cheng  Tsui Po-Hsiang
Institution:a Department of Surgery, National Taiwan University Hospital and College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC
b Department of Applied Statistics and Information Science, Ming Chuan University, Taoyuan, Taiwan, ROC
c Department of Mathematics, National Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan, ROC
d Department of Surgery, Cheng Ching General Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan, ROC
e Institute of Applied Mechanics, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC
f Research Center for Applied Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC
g Department of Medical Imaging and Radiological Sciences, College of Medicine, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan, Taiwan, ROC
Abstract:This study explored the feasibility of using the ultrasound Nakagami image to assess the degree of liver fibrosis in rats. The rat has been widely used as a model in investigations of liver fibrosis. Ultrasound grayscale imaging makes it possible to observe fibrotic rat livers in real time. Statistical analysis of the envelopes of signals backscattered from rat livers may provide useful clues about the degree of liver fibrosis. The Nakagami-model-based image has been shown to be useful for characterizing scatterers in tissues by reflecting the echo statistics, and hence the Nakagami image may serve as a functional imaging tool for quantifying rat liver fibrosis. To validate this idea, fibrosis was induced in each rat liver (n = 21) by an intraperitoneal injection of 0.5% dimethylnitrosamine. Livers were excised from rats for in vitro ultrasound scanning using a single-element transducer. The backscattered-signal envelopes of the acquired raw ultrasound signals were used for Nakagami imaging. The Metavir score determined by a pathologist was used to histologically quantify the degree of liver fibrosis. It was found that the Nakagami image could be used to distinguish different degrees of liver fibrosis in rats, since the average Nakagami parameter increased from 0.55 to 0.83 as the fibrosis score increased from 0 (i.e., normal) to 4. This correlation may be due to liver fibrosis in rats involving an increase in the concentration of local scatterers and the appearance of the periodic structures or clustering of scatterers that would change the backscattering statistics. The current findings indicate that the ultrasound Nakagami image has great potential as a functional imaging tool to complement the use of the conventional B-scan in animal studies of liver fibrosis.
Keywords:Rat liver fibrosis  Nakagami distribution  Backscattering
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