Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'Impedance' found in 24 articles
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Reflection
Reflection of the sound beam occurs when it hits a boundary between materials having different acoustic impedance. The reflection (echo) is the portion of a sound that is returned from the boundary. The reflection time (the time taken for the wave to return to the probe) can be used to determine the depth of the object.
The reflection within the body produces the ultrasound image, but should be minimized at an ultrasound couplant to skin boundary where the couplant acts as an acoustic window through which the image is seen. The amount of sound waves, which are reflected back at the interface between two tissues is depend on the angle of incidence and the difference between the acoustic impedance values of the two tissues.
If the difference is great, a large part of the sound waves will be reflected back. If too much sound is reflected back and not enough waves are remaining to be able to penetrate the tissue, the imaging will be poor.
If the difference is small, a small amount will be reflected back. Enough sound signal remains to continue with ultrasound imaging.
If the ultrasound beam meets a rough surface or small object, the beam is scattered in all directions and only a small amount will be received by the probe.

See also False Distance Artifact, Target Strength, and Snells Law.
Ultrasound Contrast Agents
(UCA / USCA) Ultrasonography is the most commonly performed diagnostic imaging procedure. The introduction of sonographic contrast media into routine practice modifies the use of ultrasound in a variety of clinical applications. USCAs consist of microbubbles filled with air or gases and can be classified according to their pharmacokinetics. Among the blood pool agents, transpulmonary ultrasound contrast agents offer higher diagnostic potential compared to agents that cannot pass the pulmonary capillary bed after a peripheral intravenous injection. In addition to their vascular phase, some USCAs can exhibit a tissue- or organ-specific phase.
The sonogram image quality is improved either by decreasing the reflectivity of the undesired interfaces or by increasing the backscattered echoes from the desired regions.

Different types of ultrasound contrast agents:
Ultrasound contrast agents act as echo-enhancers, because of the high different acoustic impedance at the interface between gas and blood. The enhanced echo intensity is proportional to the change in acoustical impedance as the sound beam crosses from the blood to the gas in the bubbles.

The ideal qualities of an ultrasound contrast agent:
high echogenicity;
low blood solubility;
low diffusivity;
ability to pass through the pulmonary capillary bed;
lack of biological effects with repeat doses.

A typical ultrasound contrast agent consists of a thin flexible or rigid shell composed of albumin, lipid, or polymer confining a gas such as nitrogen, or a perfluorocarbon. The choice of the microbubble shell and gas has an important influence on the properties of the agent.
Current generations of microbubbles have a diameter from 1 μm to 5 μm. The success of these agents is mostly dependent on the small size and on the stability of their shell, which allows passage of the microbubbles through the pulmonary circulation. Microbubbles must be made smaller than the diameter of capillaries or they would embolize and be ineffective and perhaps even dangerous.
The reflectivity of these microbubbles is proportional to the fourth power of a particle diameter but also directly proportional to the concentration of the contrast agent particles themselves.
Ultrasound contrast agents produce unique acoustic signatures that allow to separate their signal from tissue echoes and to depict whether they are moving or stationary. This enables the detection of capillary flow and of targeted microbubbles that are retained in tissues such as normal liver.
The new generation of contrast media is characterized by prolonged persistence in the vascular bed which provides consistent enhancement of the arterial Doppler signal. Contrast agents make it also possible to perform dynamic and perfusion studies. Targeted contrast imaging agents are for example taken up by the phagocytic cell systems and thus have liver/spleen specific effects.

See also Ultrasound Contrast Agent Safety, Adverse Reaction, Tissue-Specific Ultrasound Contrast Agent, and Bubble Specific Imaging.
Acoustic Lens
The acoustic lens is placed at the time the transducer is manufactured and cannot be changed. The acoustic lens is generally focused in the mid field rather than the near or far fields. The exact focal length varies with transducer frequency, but is generally in the range of 4-6 cm for a 5 MHz curved linear probe and 7-9 cm for a 3.5 MHz curved transducer.
Placing the elevation plane (z-plane) focal zone of the acoustic lens in the very near or far field would improve the beam width at precisely those depths. However, this would degrade the beam width to a much greater and unacceptable degree at all other depths.
There are some chemicals in ultrasound couplants that can degrade the acoustic lens, destroy bonding, or change the acoustic properties of the lens. Problematic chemicals include mineral oil, silicone oil, alcohol, surfactants, and fragrances. Fragrance can affect the transducer's acoustic lens or face material by absorption over time into elastomer and plastic materials, thus changing the material's weight, size, density, and acoustic impedance. Surfactants can degrade the bond between the lens and the piezoelectric elements and contribute to the accelerated degeneration of the lens.

See also Retrolenticular Afterglow.
Amplitude
The amplitude is the signal height. The amplitude of the ultrasound echo is proportional to the difference of the acoustical impedance caused by different tissue layers. The amplitude decreases with increasing penetration depth of a homogeneous tissue.

See also Color Amplitude Imaging.
Artifact
An image artifact is any image attribute, which is not present in the original imaged object. An image artifact is sometime the result of an improper operation of the imager, and in other times a consequence of natural processes or properties of the human body.
Artifacts in diagnostic ultrasound are a reflection or an echo, which appears on the display and represents the real anatomical structure not correctly. An artifact can be a false, multiple or misleading information introduced by the imaging system or by interaction of ultrasound with the adjacent tissue.

Artifacts in ultrasound can be classified as to their source like e.g.:
physiologic (motion, different sound velocities, acoustical impedances of tissue);
hardware (dimension of the ultrasound beam and the transducer array);

Image artifacts can occur in each medical ultrasound. Then an interpretation of the image is complicated and can eliminate the structural information of objects looking for.

See also Ultrasound Imaging Procedures.
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