|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Quantitative ultrasound (QUS) of bone is a relatively recent
research field. The research community is steadily growing, with
interdisciplinary branches in acoustics, medical imaging,
biomechanics, biomedical engineering, applied mathematics, bone
biology and clinical sciences, resulting in significant
achievements in new ultrasound technologies to measure bone, as
well as models to elucidate the interaction and the propagation of
ultrasonic wave in complex bone structures. Hundreds of articles
published in specialists journals are accessible from the Web and
from electronic libraries. However, no compilation and synthesis of
the most recent and significant research exist. The only book on
QUS of bone has been published in 1999 at a time when the
propagation mechanisms of ultrasound in bone were still largely
unknown and the technology was immature. The research community has
now reached a critical size, special sessions are organized in
major international meetings (e.g., at the World Congress of
Biomechanics, the annual meetings of the Acoustical Society of
America, International Bone Densitometry Workshop, etc...).
Consequently, the time has come for a completely up to date,
comprehensive review of the topic. The book will offer the most
recent experimental results and theoretical concepts developed so
far and is intended for researchers, graduate or undergraduate
students, engineers, and clinicians who are involved in the field.
The central part of the book covers the physics of ultrasound
propagation in bone. Our goal is to give the reader an extensive
view of the mathematical and numerical models as an aid to
understand the QUS potential and the types of variables that can be
determined by QUS in order to characterize bone strength. The
propagation of sound in bone is still subject of intensive
research. Different models have been proposed (for example, the
Biot theory of poroealasticity and the theory of scattering have
been used to describe wave propagation in cancellous bone, whereas
propagation in cortical bone falls in the scope of guided waves
theories). An extensive review of the models has not been published
so far. We intend in this book to present in details the models
that are used to solve the direct problem and strategies that are
currently developed to address the inverse problem. This will
include analytical theories and numerical approaches that have
grown exponentially in recent years. Most recent experimental
findings and technological developments will also be
comprehensively reviewed.
Quantitative ultrasound (QUS) of bone is a relatively recent
research field. The research community is steadily growing, with
interdisciplinary branches in acoustics, medical imaging,
biomechanics, biomedical engineering, applied mathematics, bone
biology and clinical sciences, resulting in significant
achievements in new ultrasound technologies to measure bone, as
well as models to elucidate the interaction and the propagation of
ultrasonic wave in complex bone structures. Hundreds of articles
published in specialists journals are accessible from the Web and
from electronic libraries. However, no compilation and synthesis of
the most recent and significant research exist. The only book on
QUS of bone has been published in 1999 at a time when the
propagation mechanisms of ultrasound in bone were still largely
unknown and the technology was immature. The research community has
now reached a critical size, special sessions are organized in
major international meetings (e.g., at the World Congress of
Biomechanics, the annual meetings of the Acoustical Society of
America, International Bone Densitometry Workshop, etc...).
Consequently, the time has come for a completely up to date,
comprehensive review of the topic. The book will offer the most
recent experimental results and theoretical concepts developed so
far and is intended for researchers, graduate or undergraduate
students, engineers, and clinicians who are involved in the field.
The central part of the book covers the physics of ultrasound
propagation in bone. Our goal is to give the reader an extensive
view of the mathematical and numerical models as an aid to
understand the QUS potential and the types of variables that can be
determined by QUS in order to characterize bone strength. The
propagation of sound in bone is still subject of intensive
research. Different models have been proposed (for example, the
Biot theory of poroelasticity and the theory of scattering have
been used to describe wave propagation in cancellous bone, whereas
propagation in cortical bone falls in the scope of guided waves
theories). An extensive review of the models has not been published
so far. We intend in this book to present in details the models
that are used to solve the direct problem and strategies that are
currently developed to address the inverse problem. This will
include analytical theories and numerical approaches that have
grown exponentially in recent years. Most recent experimental
findings and technological developments will also be
comprehensively reviewed.
Many significant achievements in new ultrasound technologies to
measure bone and models to elucidate the interaction and the
propagation of ultrasonic waves in complex bone structures have
been reported over the past ten years. Impaired bone remodeling
affects not only the trabecular compartment but also the cortical
one. Despite the crucial contribution of the cortical structure to
the whole bone mechanical competence, cortical bone was
understudied for a long time. A paradigm shift occurred around
2010, with a special focus placed on the importance of cortical
bone. This has sparkled a great deal of interest in new ultrasound
techniques to assess cortical bone. While our book 'Bone
Quantitative Ultrasound' published in 2011 emphasized techniques to
measure trabecular bone, this new book is devoted for a large part
to the technologies introduced recently to measure cortical bone.
These include resonant ultrasound spectroscopy, guided waves,
scattering, and pulse-echo and tomography imaging techniques.
Instrumentation, signal processing techniques and models used are
detailed. Importantly, the data accumulated in recent years such as
anisotropic stiffness, elastic engineering moduli, compression and
shear wave speeds of cortical bones from various skeletal sites are
presented comprehensively. A few chapters deal with the recent
developments achieved in quantitative ultrasound of trabecular
bone. These include (i) scattering-based approaches and their
application to measure skeletal sites such as the spine and
proximal femur and (ii) approaches exploiting the poro-elastic
nature of bone. While bone fragility and osteoporosis are still the
main motivation for developing bone QUS, this Book also includes
chapters reporting ultrasound techniques developed for other
applications of high interest such as 3-D imaging of the spine,
assessment of implant stability and transcranial brain imaging.
This book, together with the book 'Bone Quantitative Ultrasound'
published in 2011 will provide a comprehensive overview of the
methods and principles used in bone quantitative ultrasound and
will be a benchmark for all novice or experienced researchers in
the field. The book will offer recent experimental results and
theoretical concepts developed so far and would be intended for
researchers, graduate or undergraduate students, engineers, and
clinicians who are involved in the field. The book should be
considered as a complement to the first book publisher in 2011,
rather than a second edition, in the sense that basic notions
already presented in the first book are not repeated.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Isle Of Dogs
Wes Anderson
Blu-ray disc
R309
Discovery Miles 3 090
|