'Pressure' p6 Searchterm 'Pressure' found in 45 articles 3 terms [ • ] - 42 definitions [• ] Result Pages : •
The dwell time (also called ensemble length or packet size) is the transmitting duration of ultrasonic waves focused at one place or the Doppler samples for each line of sight. The reduction of the dwell time is of use if threshold pressures are exceeded. The sensitivity to slow flow and accuracy of Doppler measurement increase with longer dwell times. With increased dwell times, the frame rates decrease and the capability of Color Doppler images to depict fast changes in hemodynamics is limited. •
(AE) Induced acoustic emission is an effect of ultrasound contrast agents, presenting the interaction between the agent and the incident ultrasound wave. Microbubbles break down in high-amplitude diagnostic ultrasound energy. The bubble rupture produces a transient pressure wave, which results in a characteristic mosaic pattern from tissues containing the agent. It is important to note that the color patterns of induced acoustic emission do not represent flow signals. •
(IVUS) For intravascular ultrasound a small IVUS catheter with a probe is introduced into the artery. The transducer transmits and receives acoustic energy through this catheter. The reflected acoustic energy is used to build a picture of the inside of the vessel. A IVUS image consists of three layers around the lumen, the intima, media and adventitia. In addition, elastography or palpography could be used to evaluate the local mechanical properties of tissues (e.g. lipid pools in high-risk vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques). These techniques use the deformation caused by the intraluminal pressure generated by the probe. A high strain region at the lumen vessel wall boundary has 88% sensitivity and 89% specificity for identifying vulnerable plaques. There are high strain values of 1% in soft plaques with increased strain up to 2% at the shoulders of the plaque, while calcified material shows low strain values (0-0.2%). The radial strain in the tissue is obtained by cross-correlation techniques on the radio frequency signal. The strain is color-coded and plotted as a complimentary image to the intravascular ultrasound echogram. See also Interventional Ultrasound, Vascular Ultrasound. •
(LIPU / LIUS) Low intensity pulsed ultrasound is a form of mechanical power that is transmitted through and into tissues as an acoustic pressure wave. Low intensity pulsed ultrasound is often used in musculoskeletal and joint ultrasound and has therapeutic benefits for healing of (fresh) fractures, those that demonstrate either a delayed union or nonunion, and soft tissue repair.
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Microbubbles filled with air or inert gases are used as contrast agents in ultrasound imaging. Compression and rarefaction created by an ultrasound wave insonating a gas-filled microbubble along with the mechanical index of the ultrasonic beam lead to volume pulsations of the bubbles, and it is this change that results in the signal enhancement. Microbubbles have diameters from 1 μm to 10 μm and a thin flexible or rigid shell composed of albumin, lipid, or polymer confining a gas such as nitrogen, or a perfluorocarbon. These microbubbles can cross the pulmonary capillaries and have a serum half-life of a few minutes. Microbubbles in the 1-10 μm range have their resonance at the frequencies used in diagnostic ultrasound (1−15MHz). Smaller bubbles resonate at higher frequencies. Caused by this coincidence, they are such effective reflectors. The intrinsic compressibility of microbubbles is approximately 17,000 times more than water, and they are very strong scatterers of ultrasound. Under acoustic pressure the vibrating bubble radius may have a conventional linear response or a harmonic non-linear response. Microbubbles usually increase the Doppler signal amplitude by up to 30 dB. Further Reading: Basics:
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