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1.
IEEE Trans Biomed Circuits Syst ; 10(2): 412-23, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26954842

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we present a novel system-on-chip (SOC) solution for a portable ultrasound imaging system (PUS) for point-of-care applications. The PUS-SOC includes all of the signal processing modules (i.e., the transmit and dynamic receive beamformer modules, mid- and back-end processors, and color Doppler processors) as well as an efficient architecture for hardware-based imaging methods (e.g., dynamic delay calculation, multi-beamforming, and coded excitation and compression). The PUS-SOC was fabricated using a UMC 130-nm NAND process and has 16.8 GFLOPS of computing power with a total equivalent gate count of 12.1 million, which is comparable to a Pentium-4 CPU. The size and power consumption of the PUS-SOC are 27×27 mm(2) and 1.2 W, respectively. Based on the PUS-SOC, a prototype hand-held US imaging system was implemented. Phantom experiments demonstrated that the PUS-SOC can provide appropriate image quality for point-of-care applications with a compact PDA size ( 200×120×45 mm(3)) and 3 hours of battery life.


Subject(s)
Point-of-Care Systems , Ultrasonography/instrumentation , Algorithms , Data Compression , Equipment Design , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22828834

ABSTRACT

We present a cost-effective portable ultrasound system based on a single field-programmable gate array (FPGA) for point-of-care applications. In the portable ultrasound system developed, all the ultrasound signal and image processing modules, including an effective 32-channel receive beamformer with pseudo-dynamic focusing, are embedded in an FPGA chip. For overall system control, a mobile processor running Linux at 667 MHz is used. The scan-converted ultrasound image data from the FPGA are directly transferred to the system controller via external direct memory access without a video processing unit. The potable ultrasound system developed can provide real-time B-mode imaging with a maximum frame rate of 30, and it has a battery life of approximately 1.5 h. These results indicate that the single FPGA-based portable ultrasound system developed is able to meet the processing requirements in medical ultrasound imaging while providing improved flexibility for adapting to emerging POC applications.


Subject(s)
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods , Point-of-Care Systems , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Ultrasonography/instrumentation , Computer-Aided Design , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Image Enhancement/instrumentation , Miniaturization , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
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