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Title: Acoustic performance and clinical use of a fibreoptic hydrophone. Author: Coleman AJ, Draguioti E, Tiptaf R, Shotri N, Saunders JE. Journal: Ultrasound Med Biol; 1998 Jan; 24(1):143-51. PubMed ID: 9483782. Abstract: Initial clinical experience with the use of an optical fibre hydrophone for in vivo ultrasound dosimetry is reported. The hydrophone, originally described by Beard and Mills (1997), operates as an extrinsic, low-finesse Fabry-Perot optical sensor where acoustically-induced thickness changes in a polymer film modulate the phase difference between light beams reflected from the two surfaces of the film. The pressure waveforms from the sensor are compared with those from a calibrated piezoelectric polymer membrane hydrophone. The sensor is found to have a frequency resonance at around 12 MHz, corresponding to the thickness mode of the 50-micron polymer film. The directional responses at 0.16 MHz, 1.0 MHz and 5.0 MHz are found to be similar to those predicted for a plane piston receiver with the same diameter as that of the polymer film (400 microns). The performance of the sensor as a broad-band hydrophone is degraded by the relatively low acoustical impedance of the adhesive used in the fibre-film bond. The hydrophone was used in the clinic for measurement of acoustic pressures within the ureter of 4 patients undergoing clinical extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy on a Dornier HM3 lithotripter. Pressures in the range 0.5 to 5.0 MPa were recorded in the ureter at positions over 10 cm from the renal pelvis. Problems related to the clinical use of the sensor, including instability in the sensitivity of the sensor following handling and its mechanical strength in high-amplitude acoustic fields, are discussed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]