Details
Shear Wave Elasticity describes the propagation of transverse mechanical waves in viscoelastic tissue. When a harmonic or pulsed excitation at frequency induces displacement , the complex wave number encodes both the shear modulus and the material’s attenuation. The fundamental relation between wave speed and stiffness is
with typical brain densities and shear moduli yielding .
In a time-harmonic inversion, one measures , and computes
where (attenuation) in brain tissue is ~0.5–1.5 dB/cm at 50 Hz. Wavelengths span 10–60 mm, setting a spatial resolution limit of a few millimetres after regularized inversion.
Shear wave attenuation and dispersion are strongly frequency-dependent; higher frequencies (e.g., 160–200 Hz in ARF-SWE) produce shorter wavelengths (λ≈5–7 mm) but suffer increased loss in skull and parenchyma, limiting penetration depth to ~7–10 cm.
References
Magnetic resonance elastography: Non-invasive mapping of tissue elasticity
Muthupillai, R. et al. (1995)
Science
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