Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'Range' found in 102 articles
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Pulse Repetition Frequency
(PRF) The pulse repetition frequency is the number of pulses per second. The usual range for echocardiographs is between 200 and 5000 pulses per second. The PRF varies with the type of mode in operation.

See also Q-value.
Pulsed Wave Doppler
(PWD) Pulsed wave (PW) Doppler is a Doppler ultrasound mode that evaluates blood flow velocities in a range specific area along the length of the sound beam. Measured are changes in received frequency due to relative motion (flow) between a sound source (transducer) and sound receiver (transducer).
PW Doppler produces an audible signal as well as a graphical representation of flow. The Doppler shift produced by moving blood flow is calculated by the ultrasound system.

See also Amplitude Indicator, Pulsed Ultrasound.
Q-Value
The degree that a transducer is finely tuned to specific narrow frequency range. For example: A low Q-value means wide bandwidth and high Q-value means narrow bandwidth.

See also Pulse Inversion Doppler, Narrow Bandwidth, Dead Zone, Ultrasound Phantom.
QB-Mode
QB-mode (Quadratic Brightness-mode) images are gray scale images from the quadratic component. QB-mode achieves higher contrast and increased dynamic range than the standard B-mode ultrasound images, without loss in spatial resolution.
Real-Time Mode
Real-time mode has been developed to present motion like a movie of the body's inner workings, showing this information at a high rate. The special real-time transducer uses a larger sound beam than for A, B or M-modes. A linear array transducer with multiple crystal elements displays real-time compound B-mode images with up to 100 images per second.
At each scan line, one sound pulse is transmitted and all echoes from the surface to the deepest range are received. Then the ultrasound beam moves on to the next scan line position where pulse transmission and echo recording are repeated.

See also Compound B-Mode, Pulse Inversion Doppler, and Frame Averaging.
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