Elastomer engineering finally gets deep images from skin patch ultrasound

2022-09-03 03:59:31 By : Ms. Linda Lee

By Steve Bush 24th August 2022

Engineers at MIT have found a way to get sub-mm resolution and deep penetration from a stick-on ultrasound patch that can be worn for at least two days and peels off at the end of monitoring without leaving residue.

Engineers at MIT have found a way to get sub-mm resolution and deep penetration from a stick-on ultrasound patch that can be worn for at least two days and peels off at the end of monitoring without leaving residue.

In a proof-of-concept, they demonstrated sub-mm resolution images in the first centimetres of tissue, allowing blood vessels to be monitored live, for example, and also few-mm resolution down to 20cm or so, allowing deeper organs including the heart to be imaged.

In one demonstration, detailed blood flow patterns within the bicep muscle of a volunteer were recorded every half hour as they exercised and rested over 48 hours.

Neck blood vessels imaged at MIT using a stick-on patch

“With imaging, we might be able to capture the moment in a workout before overuse, and stop before muscles become sore,” said MIT research engineer Xiaoyu Chen. “We do not know when that moment might be yet, but now we can provide imaging data that experts can interpret.”

An issue with wearable ultrasound patches, said MIT, is that something has to flex with the skin: either the transducer array has to flex, locking the developer into low-resolution arrays with current technology, or a high-resolution rigid array has to be coupled to the skin in a way that is acoustically sound, durable and healthy for the user.

The MIT team has taken the latter approach, fabricating it own rigid high-resolution phased arrays, operating at 3, 7 and 10MHz, for use with external beam-forming electronics.

The 3MHz 40 x 40 element (20 x 20mm) device was operated as a phased array, and the other two were 40 x 20 (20 x 10mm) and operated as linear arrays. Along-the-beam resolution was 0.77mm at 3MHz, and better than 0.2mm at 10MHz.

For imaging down to 60mm, a plane wave compounding algorithm was used then, below this, phased array harmonic imaging was matched with spatial compounding algorithms.

To couple a solid ultrasound transducer to the skin, according to MIT, the conventional options are liquids or gels which work well initially but dry out and fail before two days are reached, or elastomers made from silicone, acrylic or polyurethane which cannot match the liquids or gels for acoustic performance.

The MIT team’s answer was to custom-design a tough flexible and stretchy hydrogel with high water content to give it good acoustic performance, and then to encapsulate this between two thin elastomer membranes to keep the water in.

Even these sealing membranes use bespoke chemistry: with a hand-crafted ‘bioadhesive’ layer sealing the skin-side and sticking the assembly to the user, and a triple-layer (hydrophobic-hydrophilic-adhesive) polyurethane elastomer membrane sealing the other side and bonding it to the hard sensing array.

Lastly, a tungsten-loaded coating at the rear of the ultrasonic array acts as an acoustic back-stop to improve forward acoustic performance.

The whole patch: membranes, hydrogel, array and backstop, is 3mm thick and has been dubbed a ‘Baus’ (bioadhesive ultrasound) device.

“The researchers ran the ultrasound sticker through a battery of tests with volunteers, who wore the stickers on various parts of their bodies, including the neck, chest, abdomen, and arms,” said MIT. “The stickers stayed attached to their skin, and produced clear images of underlying structures for up to 48 hours. During this time, volunteers performed a variety of activities in the lab, from sitting and standing, to jogging, biking, and lifting weights.”

At the moment, the system needs a ribbon cable connection to external signal processing and storage, but a wireless demonstrator is in the pipeline.

“We imagine we could have a box of stickers, each designed to image a different location of the body,” said project researcher Professor Xuanhe Zhao. “The patches would communicate with your cellphone, where AI algorithms would analyse the images on demand. With a few patches on your body, you could see your internal organs.”

Even in their current form “the devices could be applied to patients in the hospital, similar to heart-monitoring EKG stickers, and could continuously image internal organs without requiring a technician to hold a probe in place for long periods of time,” said the university.

MIT worked with the Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota.

The work is described in ‘Bioadhesive ultrasound for long-term continuous imaging of diverse organs‘, published in Science. Only the paper’s abstract can be viewed without payment, although the freely-available supplementary information has much to please the engineering eye, and reveals an impressive match between simulation results and real-world measurement.

Tagged with: Homepage Featured Articles medical MIT ultrasound

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Download the Elektra Awards 2022 media pack and book your sponsorship package to be part of the most prestigious awards event celebrating its 20th anniversary this year!

Get our news, blogs and comments straight to your inbox! Sign up for the Electronics Weekly newsletters: Mannerisms, Gadget Master and the Daily and Weekly roundups.

Read our special supplement celebrating 60 years of Electronics Weekly and looking ahead to the future of the industry.

Read the Electronics Weekly @ 60 supplement »

Read the first ever Electronics Weekly online: 7th September 1960. We've scanned the very first edition so you can enjoy it.

Read the very first edition »

Electronics Weekly teams up with RS Grass Roots to highlight the brightest young electronic engineers in the UK today.

Read our special supplement celebrating 60 years of Electronics Weekly and looking ahead to the future of the industry.

Read the Electronics Weekly @ 60 supplement »

Read the first ever Electronics Weekly online: 7th September 1960. We've scanned the very first edition so you can enjoy it.

Read the very first edition »

Tune into this Xilinx interview: Responding to platform-based embedded design

Tune into this podcast to hear from Chetan Khona (Director Industrial, Vision, Healthcare & Sciences at Xilinx) about how Xilinx and the semiconductor industry is responding to customer demands.

By using this website you are consenting to the use of cookies. Electronics Weekly is owned by Metropolis International Group Limited, a member of the Metropolis Group; you can view our privacy and cookies policy here.