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Searchterm 'Laminar Flow' found in 7 articles
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Laminar Flow
Laminar flow is non turbulent flow in arteries with blood traveling in layers or laminae. In a straight vessel, the layer in the center flows at a greater speed with subsequent layers toward the vessel wall flowing at slower speeds.

See also Boundary Layer, and Half-Value Layer.
Flow
Blood volume per time measured in: cm3/s.
The sonographic detection of blood flow in vascular ultrasound is limited by factors such as tissue motion (clutter), attenuation properties of the intervening tissue, and slow or low-volume flow.

Different flow types in human body:
Behaves like stationary tissue = stagnant flow.
Flow with consistent velocities across a vessel = laminar flow.
Laminar flow passes through a stricture or stenosis (in the center fast flow, near the walls the flow spirals) = vortex flow.
Flow with equal velocity = plug flow.
Flow at different velocities that fluctuates = turbulent flow.


See also Antegrade, Bi-directional Flow, Velocity, Poiseulles Law, and Venous Ultrasound.
Blood Flow Velocity
The velocity of flowing blood is usually measured in cm/s. It is always zero at the vessel wall and the velocity profile across a vessel can have various shapes depending upon the type of flow being observed (see also pulsatile flow). Laminar flow giving rise to a laminar velocity profile, plug flow giving rise to a flat velocity profile and disturbed flow can be distinguished.
Normal peak systolic velocities in the femoral and popliteal arteries vary from 90 to 110 cm/s in the femoral artery and from 40 to 70 cm/s in the popliteal artery.

See also Bi-directional Flow, Pulsatility Index, and Acceleration Index.
Poiseulles Law
Poiseulles law states that the flow rate in a long, straight tube with laminar flow is proportional to its length and viscosity and inversely proportional to the fourth power of its radius.

See also Proportionality Constant.
Variance
Variance is the modification of Doppler frequencies within each pixel during a pulse packet with color Doppler flow imaging. Variance is mapped to the color green and is used to detect turbulence. At low variance (laminar flow) pixels within each range gate are encoded in red or blue according to flow direction. At high variance (turbulent flow) a percentage of pixels within each range gate are encoded with green according to the degree of spectral broadening.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]