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Searchterm 'Hyperechoic' found in 4 articles
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Hyperechoic
The term hyperechogenic or hyperechoic is used if there are many internal echoes. Hyperechoic tissues appear bright in ultrasound imaging. Tendons are hyperechoic because of the fibrillar pattern. Ligaments appear hyperechoic when the beam is perpendicular to the tissue. Peripheral nerves are hyperechoic relative to muscle. Liver angiomas, tumor cells, blood vessels, fibrosis, and liver steatosis appear diffuse hyperechoic.
Sonographic Features
Anatomic structures respond with characteristic features on ultrasound scanning.
There are some ultrasound terms, referring to the echo appearance, that describes tissue appearance in a uniform manner:
hyperechoic or hyperechogenic (bright);
hypoechoic or hypoechogenic;
anechoic or anechogenic;
homogenous (uniform echo pattern);
heterogeneous (irregular echo pattern).

Tendons characteristically are hyperechoic on ultrasound because of the fibrillar pattern. Ligaments appear hyperechoic when the beam is perpendicular to the tissue. Peripheral nerves are hyperechoic relative to muscle.
Muscle appears relatively hypoechoic to tendon fibers. Close observation reveals hypoechoic muscle fibers separated by hyperechoic septae that converge on a hyperechoic aponeurosis. Articular hyaline cartilage appears hypoechoic. The presence of fluid within the joint outlining the cartilage produces a thin bright echo at this interface.
Sound beams do not penetrate the bone cortex. The very bright echo produced at the interface allows both recognition of the bone cortex but also can demonstrate fracture, spurring and bone callus bridging. Abnormal soft tissue calcification and ossification also produces bright reflective echoes.
Cysts or fluid filled areas are without internal echoes and are called echo free or anechoic and may demonstrate enhanced soft tissue echoes posterior to the fluid collection. Inflamed metatarsal bursae and calcaneal bursae clearly depict fluid swelling.

See also Beam Pattern and Zero Offset.
Anisotropic
Anisotropic is an area or structure with varying acoustic properties according to the direction in which they are imaged. For example, the characteristic ultrasound appearances of tendons are hyperechoic, but they appear hypoechoic when the sound beam is not at right angles to the tendon fibers.
Enhancement Artifact
Enhancement artifacts occur if decreasing of the echo amplitude is not equal with penetration depth caused by inhomogeneous tissue layers and fluids like cysts or air-filled regions. The enhancement artifact appears as a hyperintense (hyperechoic) signal. The attenuation of the ultrasound wave in fluids is much lower as the attenuation in other tissues, therefore tissues distal to fluid are enhanced. Artificial enhancement may also be found distal to a homogeneous solid tumor surrounded by adipose tissue, due to the comparatively high attenuation in fat.

See also Boundary Layer, and Half-Value Layer.
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