Medical Ultrasound Imaging
Wednesday, 15 May 2024
• Welcome to
     Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging.com!
     • Sign in / Create account
 
 'Echogenicity' p2
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 'Echogenicity' found in 12 articles
1
term [
] - 11 definitions [
]
Result Pages :
Hypoechoic
Solid regions have internal ultrasound echoes and are classified as echo poor, hypoechoic or hypoechogenic if there are few internal echoes. Hypoechoic structures appear dark in ultrasound imaging, more homogeneous structures are darker than heterogeneous.
Soft atherosclerotic plaque, liver adenoma or FNH appear with a nodular hypoechogenicity. As metastases close the blood vessels they infiltrate, tumor tissues become hypoechogenic after injection of contrast agent. Muscle appears relatively hypoechoic to tendon fibers, also articular hyaline cartilage appears hypoechoic.
Intermittent Imaging
Contrast microbubbles can be destroyed by intense ultrasound and the scattered signal level can increase abruptly for a short time during microbubble destruction, resulting in an acoustical flash (sudden increase in echogenicity).
Intermittent imaging with high acoustic output utilizes the properties of contrast microbubbles to improve blood-to-tissue image contrast by imaging intermittently at very low frame rates.
The frame rate is usually reduced to about one frame per second, or it is synchronized with cardiac cycles so that enough contrast microbubbles can flow into the imaging site where most microbubbles have been destroyed by the previous acoustic pulse. Because bubbles are destroyed by ultrasound, controlling the delay time between frames produces images whose contrast emphasizes regions with rapid blood flow rate or regions with high or low blood volume.
Isoechogenic
The term isoechogenic or isoechoic is used if different tissues have the same echogenicity and are not separate depictable.
Retrolenticular Afterglow
Retrolenticular afterglow could occur through diffraction and refraction on interfaces. A circular object may act as a lens to the ultrasound beam, showing an artifact region of increased echogenicity.
Third Generation USCA
The third generation ultrasound contrast agents (UCA/USCA) are more echogenic and stable, and are able to enhance the echogenicity of parenchyma on B-mode images. These microbubbles may thus show perfusion, even in such a difficult region as the myocardium.

See also History of Ultrasound Contrast Agents.
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]