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Introduction
There
are many situations in which ultrasound is
performed. Perhaps you are pregnant, and your
obstetrician wants you to have an ultrasound to
check on the developing baby or determine the due
date. Maybe you are having problems with blood
circulation in a limb or your heart, and your doctor
has requested a Doppler ultrasound to look at the
blood flow. Ultrasound has been a popular medical
imaging technique for many years.
Ultrasound
or ultrasonography is a medical imaging technique
that uses high frequency sound waves and their
echoes. The technique is similar to the echolocation
used by bats, whales and dolphins, as well as SONAR
used by submarines. In ultrasound, the following
events happen:
- The ultrasound
machine transmits high-frequency (1 to 5
megahertz) sound pulses into your body using a
probe;
- The sound waves
travel into your body and hit a boundary between
tissues (e.g. between fluid and soft tissue,
soft tissue and bone);
- Some of the sound
waves get reflected back to the probe, while
some travel on further until they reach another
boundary and get reflected;
- The reflected
waves are picked up by the probe and relayed to
the machine;
- The machine
calculates the distance from the probe to the
tissue or organ (boundaries) using the speed of
sound in tissue (5,005 ft/s or1,540 m/s) and the
time of the each echo's return (usually on the
order of millionths of a second); and
- The machine
displays the distances and intensities of the
echoes on the screen, forming a two dimensional
image like the one shown below.
In a
typical ultrasound, millions of pulses and echoes
are sent and received each second. The probe can be
moved along the surface of the body and angled to
obtain various views.
Ultrasound
Machine
A basic ultrasound machine has the
following parts:
- transducer probe
- probe that sends and receives the sound waves
;
- central
processing unit (CPU) - computer that does all
of the calculations and contains the electrical
power supplies for itself and the transducer
probe;
- transducer pulse
controls - changes the amplitude, frequency and
duration of the pulses emitted from the
transducer probe ;
- display -
displays the image from the ultrasound data
processed by the CPU ;
- keyboard/cursor -
inputs data and takes measurements from the
display;
- disk storage
device (hard, floppy, CD) - stores the acquired
images ; and
- printer - prints
the image from the displayed data.
Different
Types of Ultrasound
Most ultrasound machines presents a two
dimensional image, or "slice," of a three
dimensional object (fetus, organ). Two other types
of ultrasound are currently in use, 3D ultrasound
imaging and Doppler ultrasound.
3D
Ultrasound Imaging
In the last several years, ultrasound machines
capable of three-dimensional imaging have been
developed. In these machines, several
two-dimensional images are acquired by moving the
probes across the body surface or rotating inserted
probes. The two-dimensional scans are then combined
by specialized computer software to form 3D images.
Doppler
Ultrasound
Doppler ultrasound is based upon the Doppler Effect.
When the object reflecting the ultrasound waves is
moving, it changes the frequency of the echoes,
creating a higher frequency if it is moving toward
the probe and a lower frequency if it is moving away
from the probe. How much the frequency is changed
depends upon how fast the object is moving. Doppler
ultrasound measures the change in frequency of the
echoes to calculate how fast an object is moving.
Doppler ultrasound has been used mostly to measure
the rate of blood flow through the heart and major
arteries.
Major
Uses of Ultrasound
Ultrasound
has been used in a variety of clinical settings,
including obstetrics and gynecology, cardiology and
cancer detection. The main advantage of ultrasound
is that certain structures can be observed without
using radiation. Ultrasound can also be done much
faster than x-rays or other radiographic techniques.
Here is a short list of some uses for ultrasound:
Obstetrics
and Gynecology
- measuring the
size of the fetus to determine the due date;
- determining the
position of the fetus to see if it is in the
normal head down position or breech;
- checking the
position of the placenta to see if it is
improperly developing over the opening to the
uterus (cervix) ;
- seeing the number
of fetuses in the uterus;
- checking the sex
of the baby (if the genital area can be clearly
seen);
- checking the
fetus's growth rate by making many measurements
over time;
- detecting ectopic
pregnancy, the life-threatening situation in
which the baby is implanted in the mother's
Fallopian tubes instead of in the uterus ;
- determining
whether there is an appropriate amount of
amniotic fluid cushioning the baby ;
- monitoring the
baby during specialized procedures - ultrasound
has been helpful in seeing and avoiding the baby
during amniocentesis (sampling of the amniotic
fluid with a needle for genetic testing). Years
ago, doctors use to perform this procedure
blindly; however, with accompanying use of
ultrasound, the risks of this procedure have
dropped dramatically; and
- seeing tumors of
the ovary and breast.
Cardiology
- seeing the inside
of the heart to identify abnormal structures or
functions; and
- measuring blood
flow through the heart and major blood vessels.
Urology
- measuring blood
flow through the kidney ;
- seeing kidney
stones ;
- detecting
prostate cancer early; and
- a growing use for
ultrasound as a rapid imaging tool for diagnosis
in emergency rooms.
Safety
There have been many concerns about the
safety of ultrasound. Because ultrasound is energy,
the question becomes "What is this energy doing
to my tissues or my baby?" There have been some
reports of low birthweight babies being born to
mothers who had frequent ultrasound examinations
during pregnancy. The two major possibilities with
ultrasound are as follows:
- development of
heat - tissues or water absorb the ultrasound
energy which increases their temperature
locally; and
- formation of
bubbles (cavitation) - when dissolved gases come
out of solution due to local heat caused by
ultrasound.
However,
there have been no substantiated ill-effects of
ultrasound documented in studies in either humans or
animals. This being said, ultrasound should still be
used only when necessary.
About
the Examination
For
an ultrasound exam, you go into a room with a
technician and the ultrasound machine.
You
remove your clothes (all of your clothes or only
those over the area of interest).
The ultrasonographer drapes a cloth over any exposed
areas that are not needed for the exam. The
ultrasonographer applies a mineral oil-based jelly
to your skin -- this jelly eliminates air between
the probe and your skin to help pass the sound waves
into your body. The ultrasonographer covers the
probe with a plastic cover. He/she passes the probe
over your skin to obtain the required images.
Depending upon the type of exam, the probe may be
inserted into you. You may be asked to change
positions to get better looks at the area of
interest. After the images have been acquired and
measurements taken, the data is stored on disk. You
may get a hard copy of the images. You are given a
towelette to clean up.
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