浅层皮肤油墨的深度影响:下层组织的声学分析

Craig S. Carlson, M. Postema
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:皮肤纹身是一种常见的装饰,但以前缺乏深入的科学研究,研究皮肤纹身的存在是否会改变表层组织的声反应,从而改变下层组织的声反应。任何由纹身引起的图像畸变可能被认为是可以忽略不计的,然而在纹身皮肤的亮度模式图像中发现的人工制品却表明情况并非如此。本研究从理论上和实验上研究了这些人工制品的性质,在极其简化的情况下,完全平坦和均匀的分层介质和纹身猪肉。方法:推导了含薄墨层的水平和垂直分层介质的声响应计算理论。实验在体外进行。人造皮肤和猪皮被纹身,附着在人造材料上,并用13 - 6兆赫的探针进行超声波检测。测定了这些材料的声速,并测量了感知到的折射角。结果:有文身材料测得的声速明显高于无文身材料。发现纹身墨水的存在使线性声衰减增加了1 dB/cm。对于只有几毫米的典型纹身来说,这个值可以忽略不计。可以检测相邻材料的感知临界折射角,并量化其对应的声速。这些与理论的价值一致。结论:相邻材料的声速比显示在亮度模式图像中产生明显的高光。在体外和体内亮度模式扫描中观察到的伪影可以从不同声速区域之间的近乎垂直过渡来解释。这是第一次将所谓的临界折射高光与声速信息联系起来的研究。此外,研究还发现,在人体皮肤上进行实验时,该材料是一种室温声学替代材料。总之,表面纹身的存在对深层组织的声反应有一个小但可量化的影响。
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Deep impact of superficial skin inking: acoustic analysis of underlying tissue
Background: Skin tattoos are a common decoration, but profound scientific study whether the presence of a skin tattoo alters the acoustic response from superficial tissue, and therefore from underlying tissue, was previously lacking. Any image aberrations caused by tattoo presence may have been thought negligible, yet empirically found artifacts in brightness-mode images of tattooed skin suggest otherwise. This study investigated the nature of these artifacts theoretically and experimentally in extremely simplified cases of perfectly flat and homogenous layered media and in tattooed pork.Methods: Theory was derived for computing the acoustic response from horizontally and vertically layered media containing a thin inked layer. Experiments were performed in vitro. Artificial and pork skin were tattooed, attached to phantom material, and sonicated with a 13–6-MHz probe. The speed of sound of these materials was determined, and the perceived refraction angles was measured.Results: The measured speeds of sound of tattooed materials were higher than those of their uninked counterparts. The presence of tattoo ink was found to have increased the linear acoustic attenuation by 1 dB/cm. This value is negligible for typical tattoos of only few millimeters. The perceived critical refraction angles of adjacent materials could be detected, and their corresponding speeds of sound were quantified. These coincided with values derived from theory.Conclusion: The ratio of speeds of sound of adjacent materials was shown to create distinct highlights in brightness-mode images. The artifacts observed in in vitro and in vivo brightness-mode scans were explained from near-vertical transitions between areas of different sound speed. This is the first study correlating so-called critical refraction highlighting with speed-of-sound information. In addition, it was found that phantom material is a room-temperature acoustic alternative for experiments on live human skin. In summary, the presence of superficial tattoos has a small but quantifiable effect on the acoustic response from deeper tissues.
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