Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'Cycle' found in 21 articles
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M-Mode Echocardiography
M-mode (Motion-mode) ultrasound shows the motion of cardiac structures. M-mode echocardiography records the amplitude and rate of motion of a moving structure in real time by repeatedly measuring the distance of the object from the single transducer at a given moment. The single sound beam is transmitted and reflected signals are displayed as dots of varying intensities, creating lines across the screen. It yields a one-dimensional image, sometimes called an 'ice pick' view of the heart.
M-mode echocardiography is used to detect valvulopathies (calcifications, etc.) and cardiomyopathies (dyskinesis, aneurysm, etc.).

See also Bicycle Stress Echocardiography, Transthoracic Echocardiography, and Transesophageal Echocardiography.
Phase Shift
Phase in ultrasound describes where the sound wave is in its cycle of amplitude change. Different waves oscillate at different frequencies, so time is often not a suitable measure of phase.
The phase shift is a difference in the phase or the temporal offset of the peaks of a waveform along one scan line.

See also Coherence, and Histogram.
Pulsatile Flow
Biological flows vary throughout the cardiac cycle. The analog output can be filtered to give a pulsatile flow or mean flow signal.
Pulsed Ultrasound
Pulsed ultrasounds are cycles of ultrasound separated in time with gaps of no signal. Pulsed sound waves are generated by short, strong pulses of sound from a phased array of piezoelectric crystals. The transducer, though emitting ultrasound in rapid pulses, acts as a receiver most of the time. In sonography, pulsed ultrasound is used to perform diagnostic or therapeutic procedures.

See also Pulse Average Intensity, Release Burst Imaging.
Rarefactional Pressure
The rarefactional pressure is the amplitude of a negative instantaneous sound pressure in an ultrasound beam. Rarefaction is the reduction in pressure of the medium during the acoustic cycle.

See also Mechanical Index.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]