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Searchterm 'Perfluorochemicals' found in 4 articles
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Perfluorochemicals
Perfluorochemicals are used as microbubble filling gases because of their low solubility in blood and high vapor pressure. Various types of perfluorochemical gases like perfluorocarbon, perfluorobutane, perfluoropropane, and perfluorohexane are used to substitute the air in microbubbles to improve the stability and plasma longevity of the agents. Perfluorocarbons are liquids at room temperature but gas at body temperature. The large molecules of perfluorocarbons have slow diffusion and solubility which increase the enhancement time of the ultrasound contrast agent as compared to air.

See also Filling Gas, and PESDA.
Filling Gas
The gas in microbubbles is highly compressible and, when subjected to the alternating compression and refraction pressures that constitute an ultrasound pulse, microbubbles oscillate at their natural frequency at which they resonate most strongly. This is determined by their size but is also influenced by the composition of the filling gas.
Air, sulfur hexafluoride, nitrogen, and perfluorochemicals are used as filling gases. Most newer ultrasound contrast agents use perfluorochemicals because of their low solubility in blood and high vapor pressure. By substituting different types of perfluorocarbon gases for air, the stability and plasma longevity of the agents have been markedly improved, usually lasting more than five minutes.
Pulse Inversion Doppler
Selective detection of the microbubble contrast medium can be enhanced by Doppler processing that removes signals with zero Doppler frequency shifts. This will remove tissue harmonics. By detecting overlong bursts of inverted pulses and using Doppler detection methods, very high sensitivity to microbubbles can be achieved. The bubbles can be detected at sufficiently low incident power levels to avoid destroying them. Pulse inversion Doppler has demonstrated the first real-time images of myocardial perfusion using perfluorocarbon gas agents.

See also Pulse Inversion Imaging, Myocardial Contrast Echocardiography, and Perfluorochemicals.
Ultrasonic Contrast Agents
(UCA / USCA) Ultrasonic contrast agents, also called ultrasound contrast agents, are encapsulated bubbles on the order of 1-10 μm in diameter. These gas bubbles are injected into the blood stream in order to increase blood/ tissue contrast during an ultrasonogram. These microbubbles are filled with air or a gas with a lower solubility in blood than air, such as perfluorochemicals. The microbubble shell consists of albumin, phospholipid, or other material and encapsulates the gas core. Due to this construction, ultrasonic contrast agents are highly compressible, and have a high echogenicity.

See also Ultrasound Contrast Agent Safety.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]