IVAICVAug 25, 2025

2D Ultrasound Elasticity Imaging of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms Using Deep Neural Networks

arXiv:2508.19303v1h-index: 13
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses the clinical need for non-invasive rupture risk assessment in abdominal aortic aneurysm patients, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The authors tackled the problem of assessing abdominal aortic aneurysm rupture risk by developing a deep learning framework that estimates tissue stiffness from 2D ultrasound displacement fields, achieving a normalized mean squared error of 0.73% on simulated data and demonstrating generalization to phantom and clinical data.

Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) pose a significant clinical risk due to their potential for rupture, which is often asymptomatic but can be fatal. Although maximum diameter is commonly used for risk assessment, diameter alone is insufficient as it does not capture the properties of the underlying material of the vessel wall, which play a critical role in determining the risk of rupture. To overcome this limitation, we propose a deep learning-based framework for elasticity imaging of AAAs with 2D ultrasound. Leveraging finite element simulations, we generate a diverse dataset of displacement fields with their corresponding modulus distributions. We train a model with U-Net architecture and normalized mean squared error (NMSE) to infer the spatial modulus distribution from the axial and lateral components of the displacement fields. This model is evaluated across three experimental domains: digital phantom data from 3D COMSOL simulations, physical phantom experiments using biomechanically distinct vessel models, and clinical ultrasound exams from AAA patients. Our simulated results demonstrate that the proposed deep learning model is able to reconstruct modulus distributions, achieving an NMSE score of 0.73\%. Similarly, in phantom data, the predicted modular ratio closely matches the expected values, affirming the model's ability to generalize to phantom data. We compare our approach with an iterative method which shows comparable performance but higher computation time. In contrast, the deep learning method can provide quick and effective estimates of tissue stiffness from ultrasound images, which could help assess the risk of AAA rupture without invasive procedures.

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