Medical Ultrasound Imaging
Sunday, 19 May 2024
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Maximum Response Axis
(MRA) The maximum response axis or acoustic axis of a transducer is defined as the direction in which the acoustic response has its maximum value.
• View DATABASE results for 'Maximum Response Axis' (2).Open this link in a new window.
Maximum Velocity
(Vmax) The maximum velocity is the highest velocity found with significant amplitude within the sampled region normally for use in Bernoulli type gradient estimations.
• View DATABASE results for 'Maximum Velocity' (3).Open this link in a new window.
Maximum Venous Outflow
(MVO) Maximum venous outflow is the maximum rate of venous evacuation occurring in an extremity following rapid cuff deflation after venous occlusion.
• View DATABASE results for 'Maximum Venous Outflow' (3).Open this link in a new window.
Mean Velocity
The mean velocity is a mathematical mean of the spectral shifts in velocity within a given sample volume.
• View DATABASE results for 'Mean Velocity' (5).Open this link in a new window.
Mechanical Index
(MI) The mechanical index is an estimate of the maximum amplitude of the pressure pulse in tissue. It is an indicator of the likelihood of mechanical bioeffects (streaming and cavitation). The mechanical index of the ultrasound beam is the amount of negative acoustic pressure within a ultrasonic field and is used to modulate the output signature of US contrast agents and to incite different microbubble responses.
The mechanical index is defined as the peak rarefactional pressure (negative pressure) divided by the square root of the ultrasound frequency.
The FDA ultrasound regulations allow a mechanical index of up to 1.9 to be used for all applications except ophthalmic (maximum 0.23). The used range varies from 0.05 to 1.9.
At low acoustic power, the acoustic response is considered as linear. At a low MI (less than 0.2), the microbubbles undergo oscillation with compression and rarefaction that are equal in amplitude and no special contrast enhanced signal is created. Microbubbles act as strong scattering objects due to the difference in impedance between air and liquid, and the acoustic response is optimized at the resonant frequency of a microbubble.
At higher acoustic power (MI between 0.2-0.5), nonlinear oscillation occurs preferentially with the bubbles undergoing rarefaction that is greater than compression. Ultrasound waves are created at harmonics of the delivered frequency. The harmonic response frequencies are different from that of the incident wave (fundamental frequency) with subharmonics (half of the fundamental frequency), harmonics (including the second harmonic response at twice the fundamental frequency), and ultra-harmonics obtained at 1.5 or 2.5 times the fundamental frequency. These contrast enhanced ultrasound signals are microbubble-specific.
At high acoustic power (MI greater than 0.5), microbubble destruction begins with emission of high intensity transient signals very rich in nonlinear components. Intermittent imaging becomes needed to allow the capillaries to be refilled with fresh microbubbles. Microbubble destruction occurs to some degree at all mechanical indices. A mechanical index from 0.8 to 1.9 creates high microbubble destruction. The output signal is unique to the contrast agent.
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View NEWS results for 'Mechanical Index' (1).Open this link in a new window.
• View DATABASE results for 'Mechanical Index' (13).Open this link in a new window.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]