Medical Ultrasound Imaging
Friday, 22 November 2024
• Welcome to
     Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging.com!
     • Sign in / Create account
 
 'Second' p8
SEARCH   
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Z 
Searchterm 'Second' found in 50 articles
1
term [
] - 49 definitions [
]
Result Pages :
Penetration
Higher frequencies are attenuated by tissue more than lower frequencies. This means that the higher the frequency the lower the depth of penetration but the greater the resolution.
Harmonic imaging allows the use of a lower frequency pulse to be picked up and sampled at the second harmonic (higher frequency) where the low frequency allows greater penetration and high frequency provides better resolution.

See also Skinline.
Pulse Inversion Imaging
(PII) Pulse inversion imaging (also called phase inversion imaging) is a non-linear imaging method specifically made for enhanced detection of microbubble ultrasound contrast agents. In PII, two pulses are sent in rapid succession into the tissue; the second pulse is a mirror image of the first. The resulting echoes are added at reception. Linear scattering of the two pulses will give two echoes which are inverted copies of each other, and these echoes will therefore cancel out when added.
Linear scattering dominates in tissues. Echoes from linear scatterers such as tissue cancel, whereas those from gas microbubbles do not. Non-linear scattering of the two pulses will give two echoes which do not cancel out completely due to different bubble response to positive and negative pressures of equal magnitude. The harmonic components add, and the signal intensity difference between non-linear and linear scatterers is therefore increased. The resulting images show high sensitivity to bubbles at the resolution of a conventional image.
In harmonic imaging, the frequency range of the transmitted pulse and the received signal should not overlap, but this restriction is less in pulse inversion imaging since the transmit frequencies are not filtered out, but rather subtracted. Broader transmit and receive bandwidths are therefore allowed, giving shorter pulses and improved axial resolution, hence the alternative term wideband harmonic imaging. Many ultrasound machines offer some form of pulse inversion imaging.

See also Pulse Inversion Doppler, Narrow Bandwidth, Dead Zone, Ultrasound Phantom.
RF Thermal Ablation
Radio frequency (RF) thermal ablation is a technique that uses the thermal effect created by radio frequencies to destroy tumors or metastases in the liver.
This treatment for liver cancer can accurately be evaluated by contrast enhanced ultrasound. RF thermal ablation monitored by sonography can lead to immediate re-treatment, preventing a second anesthesia and shortening the hospitalization time.
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.
Repetition Rate
The repetition rate is the number of times per second that a probe delivers a sound burst. This rate is equal to the transducer's frequency divided by 1024 or lower as required by ultrasound conditions.
Result Pages :
 
Share This Page
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Look
      Ups
Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging.com
former US-TIP.com
Member of SoftWays' Medical Imaging Group - MR-TIP • Radiology TIP • Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging
Copyright © 2008 - 2024 SoftWays. All rights reserved.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertise With Us
 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]