Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'pulse sequence' found in 3 articles
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Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound
(CEUS) Contrast agents increase the reflection of ultrasonic energy, improve the signal to noise ratio and caused by that the detection of abnormal microvascular and macrovascular disorders. Contrast enhanced ultrasound is used in abdominal ultrasound (liver sonography) as well as in cerebrovascular examinations e.g., for an accurate grading of carotid stenosis. The used contrast agents are safe and well tolerated.

The quality of the enhancement depends on:
the concentration of the contrast agent;
the type of injection, flow rate;
the patient characteristics;
the microbubble quality and properties of the filling gas and the shell.

The additional use of ultrasound contrast agents (USCAs) may overcome typical limitations like poor contrast of B-mode imaging or limited sensitivity of Doppler techniques. The development of new ultrasound applications (e.g., blood flow imaging, perfusion quantification) depends also from the development of pulse sequences for bubble specific imaging. In addition, contrast enhanced ultrasound improves the monitoring of ultrasound guided interventions like RF thermal ablation.

See also Contrast Enhanced Doppler Imaging, Contrast Harmonic Imaging, Contrast Imaging Techniques and Contrast Pulse Sequencing.
Acoustically Active Lipospheres
(AALs) Acoustically active lipospheres and ultrasound are under development to deliver bioactive molecules to the vascular endothelium. The AALs are similar to both ultrasound contrast agents and drug-delivering liposomes. They can carry bioactive substances using biologically inert shells and deliver those substances when disrupted by ultrasound.
The lipospheres consist of a small gas microbubble surrounded by a thick oil shell and are enclosed by an outermost lipid layer. The gas bubble contained in these vehicles makes them acoustically active, similar to ultrasound contrast agents. Acoustically active lipospheres can be nondestructively deflected using ultrasound radiation force, and fragmented with high intensity ultrasound pulses. Their lipid-oil complex can carry bioactive substances at high concentrations. An optimized sequence of ultrasound pulses can deflect the AALs toward a vessel wall then disrupt them, painting their contents across the vascular endothelium.

See also Filling Gas, and MRX 115.
Vector Array Transducer
Vector array transducers have phasing applied to linear sequenced arrays to steer pulses in various directions.
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