Medical Ultrasound Imaging
Wednesday, 8 May 2024
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Ultrasound Safety
Intro
'Ultrasound Safety' in Ultrasound News (13)
Ultrasound Safety
The main advantage of ultrasound is that certain structures can be observed without using radiation. However, ultrasound is energy and there are ultrasound safety regulations, because two bioeffects of ultrasound are heat and cavitation. Ultrasound is a mechanical energy in which a pressure wave travels through tissue. Reflection and scattering back to the transducer are used to form the image. As sound energy is transmitted through the tissue, some energy is reflected and some power is absorbed.
Possible physical effects with ultrasound:
Thermal effects of ultrasound, because tissues or water absorb the ultrasound energy with increase in temperature.
Cavitation is the formation, growth, and dynamic behavior of gas bubbles (e.g. microbubbles used as contrast agents) at high negative pressure. This dissolved gases come out of solution due to local heat caused by sound energy. This has been determined harmful at the level of the medical usage.
Mechanical effects of ultrasound include ultrasound radiation force and acoustic streaming.

The ultrasound safety is based on two indices, the mechanical index (MI) and the thermal index (TI). The WFUMB guidelines state that ultrasound that produces temperature rises of less than 1.5°C may be used without reservation. They also state that ultrasonic exposure causing temperature rises of greater than 4°C for over 5 min should be considered potentially hazardous. This leaves a wide range of temperature increases which are within the capability of diagnostic ultrasound equipment to produce and for which no time limits are recommended. However, it has not been determined that medical ultrasound causes any adverse reaction or deleterious effect.
The American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine states that as of 1982, no independently confirmed significant biologic effects had been observed in mammalian tissue below (medical usage) 100mW/cm2.

See also Ultrasound Regulations and Ultrasound Radiation Force.
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View NEWS results for 'Ultrasound Safety' (13).Open this link in a new window.
• View DATABASE results for 'Ultrasound Safety' (9).Open this link in a new window.
Fetal Ultrasound
Fetal ultrasound is a safe and non-invasive imaging technique used to visualize and monitor the development of a fetus during pregnancy. It employs high-frequency sound waves to create detailed images of the baby, the placenta, and the uterus. Fetal ultrasound provides valuable information about the baby's growth, organ development, and overall well-being. It is commonly used to determine gestational age, assess fetal anatomy, detect abnormalities, and monitor fetal movements and heart rate. This essential tool enables healthcare professionals to ensure the optimal health of both the mother and the baby throughout the pregnancy.
The FDA (Food and Drug Administration) has established regulations governing ultrasound usage, including specific guidelines for fetal ultrasound examinations. These regulations permit an eight-fold increase in ultrasound intensity for fetal scans. They place considerably responsibility on the user to understand the output measurements, the mechanical index (MI), the thermal index (TI) and to use them in their scanning. The primary safety concern in prenatal diagnostic imaging is temperature rise. It is known that hyperthermia is teratogenic. The efforts of investigators have concentrated on defining the temperature increases and exposure times which may give rise to biological effects and on determining the ultrasound levels which might, in turn, lead to those temperature rises.
In fetal ultrasound, the highest temperature increase would be expected to occur at bone and the thermal index with bone at/near the focus (TIB) would give the 'worst case' conditions. The mechanical index and thermal index must be displayed if the ultrasound system is capable of exceeding an index of 1. The displayed indices are based on the manufacturer's experimental and modeled data. However, an independent study has demonstrated significant discrepancies over declared spatial peak time averaged intensity (I-SPTA) output of up to 400%.

See also ALARA Principle, Pregnancy Ultrasound and Doppler Fluximetry in Pregnancy.
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View NEWS results for 'Fetal Ultrasound' (4).Open this link in a new window.
• View DATABASE results for 'Fetal Ultrasound' (7).Open this link in a new window.
ALARA Principle
As low as reasonably achievable (ALARA) is in ultrasound imaging (ultrasonography) as well as in other medical imaging modalities (MRI, X-RAY, etc.) the guiding principle to keep patient exposure as low as possible for the diagnostic result.
• View DATABASE results for 'ALARA Principle' (5).Open this link in a new window.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]