Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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 'Amplitude' p6
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Searchterm 'Amplitude' found in 61 articles
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Color Power Doppler
(CPD) CPD is a type of color Doppler to visualize the presence of detectable blood flow. The flow information is based on the amplitude or strength of echoes received from moving cells and not on frequency shifts. Power Doppler is very sensitive to flowing blood but does not provide velocity or directional information.
CPD is less angle dependent than traditional color Doppler, but more sensitive to motion artifacts. Color power angio (CPA) provides better sensitivity to slow flow states.
The color maps for CPD are represented by a single continuous color (colour, Brit.). Because CPD does not provide directional information, no aliasing artifact occurs.

See also Directional Color Power Doppler.
Contrast Pulse Sequencing
(CPS) Contrast pulse sequencing is a technique to exploit contrast agent properties with series of three pulses that differ in phase and amplitude. CPS allows bubble specific imaging with non-linear fundamental and higher order harmonics, low MI, and extremely high microbubble-to-tissue background ratio.

See also Ultrasound Contrast Agent Safety.
D-Scan
B-scan comined with D-scan (D=Depth) is used to avoid image inhomogeneity. Different transmitter signals for each depth are applied and prefiltered pseudoinversely according to the transfer properties of the covering tissue. Pulse compression techniques with nonlinearly frequency modulated signals are used to gain the required energy for inverse filtering.
D-scan is a modified C-scan used in nondestructive testing with the display of amplitudes. In the 2D graphical presentation, time of flight values are displayed in the top view on a test surface.

See also A-Scan, B-Scan and C-Scan.
Damping
Damping is a process, material, design, and mounting technique used to reduce the pulse duration or ringing of the transducer. Special material is applied to the back of the transducer in order to reduce the amplitude and pulse length of the sound wave.
Damping improves axial resolution by reducing pulse length. Thereby the lateral resolution increases.
Densitometry
Densitometry in ultrasound refers to measurement of the gray level intensity of an image region. Ultrasound image gray levels usually have non-linear relationships to the echo amplitude that makes densitometry not suitable for evaluation of contrast images.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]