'Contrast' p20 Searchterm 'Contrast' found in 147 articles 18 terms [ • ] - 129 definitions [• ] Result Pages : •
The gas in microbubbles is highly compressible and, when subjected to the alternating compression and refraction pressures that constitute an ultrasound pulse, microbubbles oscillate at their natural frequency at which they resonate most strongly. This is determined by their size but is also influenced by the composition of the filling gas. Air, sulfur hexafluoride, nitrogen, and perfluorochemicals are used as filling gases. Most newer ultrasound contrast agents use perfluorochemicals because of their low solubility in blood and high vapor pressure. By substituting different types of perfluorocarbon gases for air, the stability and plasma longevity of the agents have been markedly improved, usually lasting more than five minutes. •
The first generation ultrasound contrast agents (UCA/USCA) do not pass the pulmonary vascular bed, and are therefore limited to the venous system and the right heart cavities after intravenous injection.
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In contrast enhanced ultrasound, the focus is the point at which maximum bubble destruction occur.
The transmit focus is the region on the axis of an ultrasound beam where the width of the beam has a minimum value. All waves crossing the focus are in phase in relation to the transducer surface or to the electronic summing point of an electronically focused array. •
Fundamental imaging describes ultrasound imaging and Doppler modes in which the received signal is acquired and processed under the assumption of linear propagation and scattering. See also Contrast Pulse Sequencing. •
Gray scale [also grayscale, grey scale = brit.] produces basically black and white images with series of shades of gray. Solid areas appear white and fluid areas appear black, varying from black at the weakest intensity to white at the strongest. Gray scale resolves artifacts as small as 1 mm. The display is made by transmitting bursts of energy and analyzing the returning signal. Gray scale pictures are limited to the gray scale tones; color pictures display more information because the color is added to the gray scale. Most ultrasound contrast agents also improve gray scale visualization of the flowing blood to such a degree that the tissue echogenicity increases. Gray scale enhancement of flow in an organ promises to improve lesion detection, along with the ability to differentiate between normal and abnormal areas, using many of the criteria already routinely used in CT and MRI. See also Compress, Densitometry, Triplex Exam and QB-Mode. Result Pages : |