High-frequency Quantitative Ultrasound Imaging of Human Rotator Cuff Muscles: Assessment of Repeatability and Reproducibility.
Yuanshan WuVictor BarrereAria AshirXiaojun ChenLivia T SilvaSaeed JerbanAiguo HanMichael P AndreSameer B ShahEric Y ChangPublished in: Ultrasonic imaging (2023)
This study evaluated the repeatability and reproducibility of using high-frequency quantitative ultrasound (QUS) measurement of backscatter coefficient (BSC), grayscale analysis, and gray-level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM) textural analysis, to characterize human rotator cuff muscles. The effects of varying scanner settings across two different operators and two US systems were investigated in a healthy volunteer with normal rotator cuff muscles and a patient with chronic massive rotator cuff injury and substantial muscle degeneration. The results suggest that BSC is a promising method for assessing rotator cuff muscles in both control and pathological subjects, even when operators were free to adjust system settings (depth, level of focus, and time-gain compensation). Measurements were repeatable and reproducible across the different operators and ultrasound imaging platforms. In contrast, grayscale and GLCM analyses were found to be less reliable in this setting, with significant measurement variability. Overall, the repeatability and reproducibility measurements of BSC indicate its potential as a diagnostic tool for rotator cuff muscle evaluation.
Keyphrases
- rotator cuff
- high frequency
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- endothelial cells
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- case report
- computed tomography
- optical coherence tomography
- diffusion weighted imaging
- data analysis
- clinical evaluation
- contrast enhanced ultrasound