'Phase' p11 Searchterm 'Phase' found in 77 articles 4 terms [ • ] - 73 definitions [• ] Result Pages : • ![]() 'The System of Choice for Shared Service. The LOGIQ® 7 system provides a full range of clinical applications including abdominal, small parts, surgery, vascular and cardiac imaging and the power of GE's patented TruScan architecture. Just imagine an ultrasound system so versatile and reliable that it can meet the demands of virtually any clinical setting. And an ergonomic design that improves scanning comfort and clinical work flow.'
Device Information and Specification
APPLICATIONS
Abdominal, cardiac, breast, intraoperative, musculoskeletal, neonatal, OB/GYN, orthopedic, pediatric, small parts, transcranial, urologic, vascular
CONFIGURATION
17' high resolution non-interlaced flat CRT, 4 active probe ports
B-mode, M-mode, coded harmonic imaging, color flow mode (CFM), power Doppler imaging (PDI), color Doppler, pulsed wave Doppler, tissue harmonic imaging
IMAGING OPTIONS
CrossXBeam spatial compounding, coded ultrasound acquisition),speckle reduction imaging (SRI), TruScan technology store raw data, CINE review with 4 speed types
OPTIONAL PACKAGE
Transesophageal scanning, stress echo, tissue velocity imaging (TVI), tissue velocity Doppler (TVD), contrast harmonic imaging
STORAGE, CONNECTIVITY, OS
Patient and image archive, HDD, DICOM 3.0, CD/DVD, MOD, Windows-based
DATA PROCESSING
Digital beamformer with 1024 system processing channel technology
H*W*D m (inch.)
1.62 * 0.61 * 0.99 (64 * 24 * 39)
WEIGHT
246 kg (498 lbs.)
POWER CONSUMPTION
less than 1.5 KVA
• ![]() 'The System of Choice for General Imaging Imagine a leading-edge ultrasound system so versatile that it can meet the demands of virtually any clinical setting. With the LOGIQ® 9, you'll have a high-performance system capable of multi-dimensional imaging for a full range of clinical applications - from abdominal to breast to vascular imaging. And an ergonomic design that improves scanning comfort and clinical work flow. Now, imagine what LOGIQ® 9 could do for you and your patients.'
Device Information and Specification
APPLICATIONS
Abdominal, cardiac, breast, intraoperative, musculoskeletal, neonatal, OB/GYN, orthopedic, pediatric, small parts, transcranial, urologic, vascular
CONFIGURATION
17' high resolution non-interlaced flat CRT, 4 active probe ports
B-mode, M-mode, coded harmonic imaging, color flow mode (CFM), power Doppler imaging (PDI), PW-HPRF, CW Doppler, color Doppler, pulsed wave Doppler, tissue harmonic imaging
IMAGING OPTIONS
CrossXBeam spatial compounding, coded ultrasound acquisition), speckle reduction imaging (SRI), TruScan technology store raw data, real-time 4D ultrasound, Tru 3D ultrasound
STORAGE, CONNECTIVITY, OS
Patient and image archive, HDD, DICOM 3.0, CD/DVD, MOD, PCMCIA, USB, Windows-based
DATA PROCESSING
Digital beamformer with 1024 system processing channel technology
H*W*D m (inch.)
1.62 * 0.61 * 0.99 (64 * 24 * 39)
WEIGHT
202 kg (408 lb.)
POWER CONSUMPTION
less than 2 KVA
•
A linear probe contains one or more acoustic linear array transducer elements arranged in a line to send pulses of sound into a material. The linear array gives a large probe surface (footprint) and near field. In Doppler mode, a linear probe operates a subset of its elements as a linear phased array and can thus steer the Doppler beam at a selected angle to the imaging beam. This is a popular configuration for peripheral vascular and perivascular scanning.
• ![]() 'Megas CVX is your fully digital beamformer ultrasound system with phased, linear, convex and annular array technology. The modern modularity offers basic B-Mode, PW-CW Doppler, CFM and Power Doppler, TEI™-Tissue Enhancement Imaging and CnTI™- Contrast Tuned Imaging™.' •
Standard scanners allow visualizing microbubbles on conventional gray scale imaging in large vascular spaces. In the periphery, more sensitive techniques such as Doppler or non-linear gray scale modes must be used because of the dilution of the microbubbles in the blood pool. Harmonic power Doppler (HPD) is one of the most sensitive techniques for detecting ultrasound contrast agents. Commonly microbubbles are encapsulated or otherwise stabilized to prolong their lifetime after injection. These bubbles can be altered by exposure to ultrasound pulses. Depending on the contrast agent and the insonating pulse, the changes include deformation or breakage of the encapsulating or stabilizing material, generation of free gas bubbles, reshaping or resizing of gas volumes. High acoustic pressure amplitudes and long pulses increase the changes. However, safety considerations limit the pressure amplitude and long pulses decrease spatial resolution. In addition, lowering the pulse frequency increases destruction of contrast bubbles. However, at low insonation power levels, contrast agent particles resist insonation without detectable changes. Newer agents are more reflective and will usually allow gray scale imaging to be used with the advantages of better spatial resolution, fewer artifacts and faster frame rates. Feasible imaging methods with advantages in specific acoustic microbubble properties: Resonating microbubbles emit harmonic signals at double their resonance frequency. If a scanner is modified to select only these harmonic signals, this non-linear mode produces a clear image or trace. The effect depends on the fact that it is easier to expand a bubble than to compress it so that it responds asymmetrically to a symmetrical ultrasound wave. A special array design allows to perform third or fourth harmonic imaging. This probe type is called a dual frequency phased array transducer. See also Bubble Specific Imaging. Result Pages : |