Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'C-Scan' found in 5 articles
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C-Scan
A C-scan ultrasound can be displayed in 2D or 3D ultrasound technique. C-scan systems can generate images which are parallel to the surface of the skin (coronal). 2D plane images, usually in gray scale, are recordable at different depths, maintaining high quality subsurface information.
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.
A-Scan
A-scans are used in ophthalmologic scanning, to detect and monitor pregnancy problems, and screen intracranial mass lesions by using A-modes.
A-scan ultrasound biometry, commonly referred to as an A-scan, is a routine diagnostic test used in ophthalmology. The A-scan provides data on the shape of the eye, which is a major determinant in common sight disorders.
Ultrasound scanners used in this type of test require usually direct contact with the eye.

See also A-Mode, Oculoplethysmography, Ultrasound Biomicroscopy, B-Scan, C-Scan and D-Scan.
B-Scan
B-scan ultrasonography, or B-scan, is a diagnostic test, for example used in ophthalmology to produce a two-dimensional, cross-sectional view of the eye and the orbit. The presentation of the reflected pulses are displayed in rectangular coordinates, in which the travel time of an ultrasound pulse is represented as a shift along one axis, and the probe movement is represented as a shift along the other axis.

See also Ultrasound Imaging Procedures, A-Scan, C-Scan and D-Scan.
Ultrasound Biomicroscopy
Ultrasound biomicroscopy utilizes high frequency (10 - 50 MHz) diagnostic ultrasound to examine living tissue at a microscopic level and allows to image the skin with extremely high resolution to a depth of 2-3 centimeters. Ultrasound biomicroscopy images provide detailed anatomical information that can lead to better and more accurate treatments and avoid a biopsy.
Ultrasound biomicroscopy improves also the spatial resolution of US images of the anterior segment of the eye. US biomicroscopy of the eye operates in the 50 MHz range with a possible axial resolution on the order of 30 μm. In this frequency range, tissue penetration of only approximately 5 mm is attainable. Both continuous wave Doppler and high-frequency pulsed Doppler can be used.

See also Ultrasound Imaging Procedures, A-Scan, B-Scan and C-Scan.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]