Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'Impedance' found in 24 articles
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Impedance
In ultrasound imaging, impedance is the product of the density of a material and the speed of sound in that material.
Acoustic Impedance
(Z) The acoustic impedance is dependent on the density of the material in which sound is propagated through. When an ultrasonic wave crosses an interface between tissues with different acoustic impedance, the wave divides in 2 components, and the energy of the reflected components directly relates with the acoustic impedance.
The greater the impedance the more dense the material, and the greater the difference in acoustic impedance between two adjacent tissues the more reflective will be their boundary.
The acoustic impedance (the unit is 'Rayl') is the product of the sound velocity and the physical dense.
The acoustic impedance is very high between air or bone and other body tissues, therefore not enough energy crosses these interfaces, and no information can be collected from organs placed behind them.

See also Mirror Artifact, Reverberation Artifact, Cross Talk and Ultrasound Physics.
Backscattering
Ultrasound waves are reflected when there is a change in acoustic impedance. The larger the change, the more ultrasound is reflected. Microbubbles have an enormous difference in acoustic impedance as compared to surrounding fluid due to the large differences in density, elasticity and compressibility.
At low acoustic power (mechanical index less than 0.1), the mechanism of ultrasound reflection is that of Rayleigh scattering and the microbubbles may be regarded as point scatterers. The scattering strength of a point scatterer is proportional to the sixth power of the particle radius and to the fourth power of the ultrasound frequency;; the echogenicity of such contrast agent is therefore highly dependent upon particle size and transmit frequency. The backscattered intensity of a group of point scatterers is furthermore directly proportional to the total number of scatterers in the insonified volume. The concentration of the contrast medium is of importance.

See also Backscatter Energy, Cross-section Scattering.
Composite Array
Composite arrays are combinations of piezoelectric ceramics and polymers that form a new material with different properties. Piezocomposites improve the performance of usual arrays such as the mechanically scanned annular array and the linear phased array.
Piezocomposites reduce the acoustic impedance with a better impedance match with tissue. The result is a reduction of the reverberation level in the near field. Unwanted surface waves propagating laterally over the transducer are suppressed. The composite materials allow to vary the electromechanical coupling constant, and to give better control over the trade-off between sensitivity and bandwidth.

See also Narrow Bandwidth, Dead Zone, Ultrasound Phantom.
Echogenicity
Echogenicity is the ability of a medium to create an echo, for example to return a signal when tissue is in the path of the sound beam. The ultrasound echogenicity is dependent on characteristics of tissues or contrast agents and is measured by calculating the backscattering and transmission coefficients as a function of frequency.
The fundamental parameters that determine echogenicity are density and compressibility. Blood is two to three orders of magnitude less echogenic than tissue due to the relatively small impedance differences between red blood cells and plasma. The tissue echogenicity can be increased by ultrasound contrast agents. Encapsulated microbubbles are highly echogenic due to differences in their compressibility and density, compared to tissue or plasma.
Microbubbles are 10,000 times more compressible than red blood cells. The compressibility of air is 7.65 x 10−6 m2/N, in comparison with 4.5 x 10-11 m2/N for water (on the same order of magnitude as tissue and plasma). This impedance mismatch results in a very high echogenicity. An echo from an individual contrast agent can be detected by a clinical ultrasound system sensitive to a volume on the order of 0.004 pl.

See also Isoechogenic, Retrolenticular Afterglow, and Sonographic Features.
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