ABSTRACT Three-dimensional ultrasound images are blurred by the ultrasound pulse through the convolution between the 3-D tissue signal and the 3-D pulse. The blurring reduces the spatial resolution of the 3-D ultrasound images and, consequently, their diagnostic value. This paper presents a method for 3-D blind homomorphic deconvolution of medical 3-D ultrasound images to improve their spatial resolution. The blind estimate of the 3-D pulse is necessary because the pulse changes in spatial extent and frequency composition as it passes through the tissues and because the pulse is not separable in its spatial dimensions. The method was tested on a 3-D image of a phantom with anechoic spheres of known size in a uniform diffuse scattering matrix. The spheres were clearly better defined and had volumes much closer to the true volume in the deconvolved image than in the original image.
© 2001, by The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. All rights reserved.