Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Attenuation Coefficient
This coefficient is a quantification of the energy intensity loss of waves (electromagnetic or mechanical) due to attenuation. In ultrasound imaging it is the relative energy intensity loss per traveled centimeter. The ultrasound attenuation coefficient is measured in units of dB/cm. The attenuation coefficient in soft tissues is nearly proportional to the ultrasound frequency. The attenuation coefficient is doubled when the frequency is doubled.
This coefficient (dB/cm) divided by the frequency (MHz) is almost constant in a given tissue.
blood: 0.2 MHz x dB/cm;
fatty tissue: 0.6 MHz x dB/cm;
liver: 0.9 MHz x dB/cm;
soft tissue: 0.5-1.0 MHz x dB/cm.

Bernoulli Equation
The Bernoulli equation states that the total fluid energy along a streamline of fluid of flow is constant. This is a form of the more general law of energy conservation.

See also Bernoulli Effect.
Half-Value Layer
(HVL) The attenuation of ultrasound waves in human tissue is characterized as the half value layer, or the half power distance. Half value layer means the distance the sound beam will travel in a tissue before its amplitude or energy is attenuated to half its original value. Air and lung tissue have extremely short half-power distances and represent severe obstacles to the transmission of acoustic energy.
Intravascular Ultrasound
(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.
Side Effect
Diagnostic ultrasound imaging has no known risks or long-term side effects. Discomfort to the patient is very rare if the sonogram is accurately performed by using appropriate frequencies and intensity ranges. However, the application of the ALARA principle is always recommended.
There are reports of low birth weight of babies after applying more than the recommended ultrasound examinations during pregnancy. Women who think they might be pregnant should raise this issue with the doctor before undergoing an abdominal ultrasound, to avoid any harm to the fetus in the early stages of development.
Since ultrasound is energy, sensitive tissues like the reproductive organs could possibly sustain damage if vibrated to a high degree by too intense ultrasound waves. In diagnostic ultrasonic procedures, such damage would only result from improper use of the equipment.

Possible ultrasound bioeffects:
Ultrasonic heating of tissues can be created by absorption of the ultrasound energy.
Due to increasing of temperature, dissolved gases from microbubbles come out of the contrast solution.

The thermal effect is controlled by the displayed thermal index and the mechanical index indicates the risk of cavitation.
An ultrasound gel is applied to obtain better contact between the transducer and the skin. This has the consistency of thick mineral oil and is not associated with skin irritation or allergy.
Specific conditions for which ultrasound may be selected as a treatment may be attached with higher risks.

See also Ultrasound Imaging Procedures, Fetal Ultrasound and Obstetric and Gynecologic Ultrasound.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]