Title: The Physics of Diagnostic Ultrasound FRCR Physics Lectures
1The Physics of Diagnostic UltrasoundFRCR Physics
Lectures
Session 1 2
- Mark Wilson
- Clinical Scientist (Radiotherapy)
mark.wilson_at_hey.nhs.uk
Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals
NHS Trust
2Session 1 Overview
- Session Aims
- Basic physics of sound waves
- Basic principles of image formation
- Interactions of ultrasound waves with matter
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3Basic Physics
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4Basic Physics
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5Basic Physics
- Sound Waves
- Sounds waves are mechanical pressure waves which
propagate through a medium causing the particles
of the medium to oscillate backward and forward - The term Ultrasound refers to sound waves of such
a high frequency that they are inaudible to
humans - Ultrasound is defined as sound waves with a
frequency above 20 kHz - Ultrasound frequencies used for imaging are in
the range 2-15 MHz - The velocity and attenuation of the ultrasound
wave is strongly dependent on the properties of
the medium through which it is travelling
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6Basic Physics
- Wave Propagation
- Imagine a material as an array of molecules
linked by springs - As an ultrasound pressure wave propagates
through the medium, molecules in regions of high
pressure will be pushed together (compression)
whereas molecules in regions of low pressure will
be pulled apart (rarefaction) - As the sound wave propagates through the medium,
molecules will oscillate around their equilibrium
position
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7Basic Physics
- Power and Intensity
- A sound wave transports Energy through a medium
from a source. Energy is measured in joules (J) - The Power, P, produce by a source of sound is
the rate at which it produces energy. Power is
measured in watts (W) where 1 W 1 J/s - The Intensity, I, associated with a sound wave
is the power per unit area. Intensity is measured
in W/m2 - The power and intensity associated with a wave
increase with the pressure amplitude, p
Power, P ? p
Intensity, I ? p2
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8Basic Physics
- Frequency (f)
- Number of cycles per second
- Unit Hertz (Hz)
- Speed (c)
- Speed at which a sound wave travels is determined
by the medium - Unit Metres per second (m/s)
- Air 330 m/s
- Water 1480 m/s
- Av. Tissue 1540 m/s
- Bone 3190 m/s
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9Basic Physics
- Wavelength (?)
- Distance between consecutive crests or other
similar points on the wave - Unit Metre (m)
- A wave from a source of frequency f, travelling
through a medium whose speed of sound is c, has a
wavelength ?
? c / f
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10Basic Principles of Image Formation
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11Basic Principles of Image Formation
D
Source of sound
)
Sound reflected at boundary
)
)
)
)
Distance Speed x Time
2D c x t
)
)
)
)
)
Reduced signal amplitude
)
)
)
)
)
No signal returns
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12Basic Principles of Image Formation
Tissue 1
Tissue 2
Tissue 3
Transducer Can transmit and receive US
- Ultrasound pulse is launched into the first
tissue - At tissue interface a portion of ultrasound
signal is transmitted into the second tissue and
a portion is reflected within the first tissue
(termed an echo) - Echo signal is detected by the transducer
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13Basic Principles of Image Formation
- B-Mode Image
- A B-mode image is a cross-sectional image
representing tissues and organ boundaries within
the body - Constructed from echoes which are generated by
reflection of US waves at tissue boundaries, and
scattering from small irregularities within
tissues - Each echo is displayed at a point in the image
which corresponds to the relative position of its
origin within the body - The brightness of the image at each point is
related to the strength (amplitude) of the echo - B-mode Brightness mode
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14Basic Principles of Image Formation
- B-Mode Image Formation
- A 2D B-mode image is formed from a large number
of B-mode lines, where each line in the image is
produced by a pulse echo sequence
Transducer
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15Basic Principles of Image Formation
Rectangular FOV Useful in applications where
there is a need to image superficial areas at the
same time as organs at a deeper level
Trapezoidal FOV Wide FOV near transducer and even
wider FOV at deeper levels
Sector FOV useful for imaging heart where access
is normally through a narrow acoustic window
between ribs
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16Basic Principles of Image Formation
- B-Mode Image How Long Does it Take?
- 1. Minimum time for one line (2 x depth) /
speed of sound 2D / c seconds - 2. Each frame of image contains N lines
- 3. Time for one frame 2ND / c seconds
- E.g. D 12 cm, c 1540 m/s, Frame rate 20
frames per second - Frame rate c / 2ND
- N c / 2D x Frame rate 320 lines (poor -
approx half of standard TV) - Additional interpolated lines are inserted
between image lines to boost image quality to the
human eye - 4. Time is very important!!!
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17Basic Principles of Image Formation
- Time Gain Compensation (TGC)
- Deeper the source of echo ? Smaller signal
intensity - Due signal attenuation in tissue and reduction
in initial US beam intensity by reflections - Operator can TGC use to artificially boost the
signals from deeper tissues (like a graphic
equaliser)
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18Basic Principles of Image Formation
- M-Mode Image
- Can be used to observe the motion of tissues
(e.g. Echocardiography) - One direction of display is used to represent
time rather than space
Time
Transducer at fixed point
Depth
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19Basic Principles of Image Formation
- M-Mode Image of Mitral Valve
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20Ultrasound Interactions in Matter
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21Ultrasound Interactions
- Reflection
- Scatter
- Refraction
- Attenuation and Absorption
- Diffraction
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22Ultrasound Interactions
- Speed of Sound, c
- The speed of propagation of a sound wave is
determined by the medium it is travelling in - The material properties which determine speed of
sound are density, ? (mass per unit volume) and
elasticity, k (stiffness)
Atom / Molecule
Bond
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23Ultrasound Interactions
- Speed of Sound, c
- Consider a row of masses (molecules) linked by
springs (bonds) - Sound wave can be propagated along the row of
masses by giving the first mass a momentary
push to the right - This movement is coupled to the second mass by
the spring
Sound wave
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24Ultrasound Interactions
Small masses (m) model a material of low density
linked by springs of high stiffness K
- Stiff spring will cause the second mass to
accelerate quickly to the right and pass on the
movement to the third mass - Smaller masses are more easily accelerated by
spring - Hence, low density and high stiffness lead to
high speed of sound
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25Ultrasound Interactions
Large masses (M) model a material of high density
linked by springs of low stiffness k
M
M
M
M
k
k
k
- Weak spring will cause the second mass to
accelerate relatively slowly - Larger masses are more difficult to accelerate
- Hence, high density and low stiffness lead to
low speed of sound
Speed of Sound c ? k / ?
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26Ultrasound Interactions
Material C (m/s)
Liver 1578
Kidney 1560
Fat 1430
Average Tissue 1540
Water 1480
Bone 3190
Air 330
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27Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
- Reflection of Ultrasound Waves
- When an ultrasound wave travelling through one
type of tissue encounters an interface with a
tissue with different acoustic impedance, z, some
of its energy is reflected back towards the
source of the wave, while the remainder is
transmitted into the second tissue - - Reflections occur at tissue boundaries where
there is a change in acoustic impedance
z2
z1
Transducer
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28Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
- Acoustic Impedance (z)
- The acoustic impedance of a medium is a measure
of the response of the particles of the medium to
a wave of a given pressure - The acoustic impedance of a medium is again
determined by its density, ?, and elasticity, k
(stiffness) - As with speed of sound, consider a row of masses
(molecules) linked by springs
Sound wave
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29Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
Small masses (m) model a material of low density
linked by weak springs of low stiffness k
- A given pressure is applied momentarily to the
first small mass m - The mass is easily accelerated to the right and
its movement encounters little opposing force
from the weak spring k - This material has low acoustic impedance, as
particle movements are relatively large in
response to a given applied pressure
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30Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
Large masses (M) model a material of high density
linked by springs of high stiffness K
M
M
M
M
K
K
K
- In this case, the larger masses M accelerate
less in response to the applied pressure - Their movements are further resisted by the
stiff springs - This material has high acoustic impedance, as
particle movements are relatively small in
response to a given applied pressure
Acoustic Impedance z ? ?k Acoustic Impedance z
?c
Can also be shown
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31Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
z1
z2
pi , Ii
pt , It
pr , Ir
- Amplitude Reflection Coefficient (r)
Z2 Z1
pr
r
pi
Z1 Z2
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32Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
- Intensity Reflection Coefficient (R)
- Strength of reflection depends on the difference
between the Z values of the two materials - Ultrasound only possible when wave propagates
through materials with similar acoustic
impedances only a small amount reflected and
the rest transmitted - Therefore, ultrasound not possible where air or
bone interfaces are present
Intensity Transmission Coefficient (T)
T 1 - R
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33Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
Interface R T
Soft Tissue-Soft Tissue 0.01-0.02 0.98-0.99
Soft Tissue-Bone 0.40 0.60
Soft Tissue-Air 0.999 0.001
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34Ultrasound Interactions - Reflection
- For a flat, smooth surface the angle of
reflection, r the angle of incidence, i - In the body surfaces are not usually smooth and
flat, then r ? i
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35Ultrasound Interactions - Scatter
- Scatter
- Reflection occurs at large interfaces such as
those between organs where there is a change in
acoustic impedance - Within most organs there are many small scale
variations in acoustic properties which
constitute small scale reflecting targets - Reflection from such small targets does not
follow the laws of reflection for large
interfaces and is termed scattering - Scattering redirects energy in all directions,
but is a weak interaction compared to reflection
at large interfaces
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36Ultrasound Interactions - Refraction
- Refraction
- When an ultrasound wave crosses a tissue boundary
at an angle (non-normal incidence), where there
is a change in the speed of sound c, the path of
the wave is deflected as it crosses the boundary
c2 (gtc1)
c1
Snells Law
sin (i)
c1
i
c2
sin (t)
t
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37Ultrasound Interactions - Attenuation
- Attenuation
- As an ultrasound wave propagates through a
medium, the intensity reduces with distance
travelled - Attenuation describes the reduction in intensity
with distance and includes scattering,
diffraction, and absorption - Attenuation increases linearly with frequency
- Limits frequency used trade off between
penetration depth and resolution
Intensity, I
Low freq.
High freq.
Distance, d
I Ioe- ?d
Where ? is the attenuation coefficient
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38Ultrasound Interactions - Attenuation
- Absorption
- In soft tissue most energy loss (attenuation) is
due to absorption - Absorption is the process by which ultrasound
energy is converted to heat in the medium - Absorption is responsible for tissue heating
- Decibel Notation
Attenuation and absorption is often expressed in
terms of decibels
Decibel, dB 10 log10 (I2 / I1)
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39Ultrasound Interactions - Diffraction
- Diffraction
- Diffraction is the process by which the
ultrasound wave diverges (spreads out) as it
moves away from the source - Divergence is determined by the relationship
between the width of the source (aperture) and
the wavelength of the wave
High Divergence Aperture large compared to ?
Low Divergence Aperture small compared to ?
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40Break
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41Session 2 Overview
- Session Aims
- Construction and operation of the ultrasound
transducer - Ultrasound instrumentation
- Ultrasound safety
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42Ultrasound Transducer
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43Ultrasound Transducer
- Transducer
- The transducer is the device that converts
electrical transmission pulses into ultrasonic
pulses, and ultrasonic echo pulses into
electrical signals - A transducer produces ultrasound pulses and
detects echo signals using the piezoelectric
effect - The piezoelectric effect describes the
interconversion of electrical and mechanical
energy in certain materials - If a voltage pulse is applied to a piezoelectric
material, the material will expand or contract
(depending on the polarity of the voltage) - If a force is applied to a piezoelectric
material which causes it to expand or contract
(e.g. pressure wave), a voltage will be induced
in the material
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44Ultrasound Transducer
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45Ultrasound Transducer
- Transducer
- A transducer only generates a useful ultrasound
beam at one given frequency - This frequency corresponds to a wavelength in
the transducer equal to twice the thickness of
the piezoelectric disk This is due to a process
known as Resonance! - Choice of frequency is important remember that
attenuation increases with increasing frequency - Image resolution increases with frequency
- Therefore, there is a trade-off between scan
depth and resolution for any particular
application
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46Ultrasound Transducer
a
NEAR FIELD
FAR FIELD
NFL
Near Field Length, NFL a2 / ?
a radius of transducer ? Wavelength
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47Ultrasound Transducer
- Beam Shape - Diffraction
- In the near field region the beam energy is
largely confined to the dimensions of the
transducer - Need to select a long near field length to
achieve good resolution over the depth you wish
to scan too - Near field length increases with increasing
transducer radius, a, and decreasing wavelength,
? - Short wavelength means high frequency not very
penetrating - Large transducer radius Wide beam (poor
lateral resolution) - Trade-off between useful penetration depth and
resolution!!
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48Ultrasound Transducer
- Beam Focusing
- An improvement to the overall beam width can be
obtained by focusing - Here the source is designed so that the waves
converge towards a point in the beam, the focus,
where the beam achieves its minimum width - Beyond the focus, the beam diverges again but
more rapidly that for an unfocused beam with the
same aperture and frequency
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49Ultrasound Transducer
F
a
W
Beam width at focus, W F? / a
- At focal point
- Maximum ultrasound intensity
- Maximum resolution
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50Ultrasound Transducer
- Beam Focusing
- For a single element source, focusing can be
achieved in one of two ways - A curved source
- A curved source is manufactured with a radius of
curvature of F and hence produces curved wave
fronts which converge at a focus F cm from the
source
Source
Focus
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51Ultrasound Transducer
- Beam Focusing
- For a single element source, focusing can be
achieved in one of two ways - 2) An acoustic lens
- An acoustic lens is attached to the face of a
flat source and produces curved wave fronts by
refraction at its outer surface (like an optical
lens). A convex lens is made from a material with
the lower speed of sound than tissue.
Lens
Focus
Source
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52Ultrasound Transducer
- Beam Shape - Overlapping Groups of Elements
Fire elements 1-5 together
Fire elements 2-6 together
And then
And so on
Near field length increases as (N)2
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53Ultrasound Transducer
Waves from outer elements 1 and 5 have greater
path lengths than those from other
elements Therefore signals do not arrive
simultaneously at the target and reflections do
not arrive at all elements at the same time
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54Ultrasound Transducer
Time delays
Introduce time delays to compensate for extra
path length on both transit and receive
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55Ultrasound Transducer
- Fire transducer several times with different
focus to compile better image - However, more focus points decreases frame rate
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56Ultrasound Transducer
- Resolution
- Resolution in three planes
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57Ultrasound Transducer
Resolution Depends on Typical Value (mm)
Axial Pulse length 0.2 - 0.5
Lateral Beam width 2 5
Slice Thickness Beam height 3 - 8
- Higher frequency improves resolution in all
three planes - Slice thickness is a hot topic for improvement
2D arrays
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58Instrumentation
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59Instrumentation
Clock
Transmitter
TGC Generator
Transducer
Beam Controller
x, y
AD Converter
z
Signal Processor
Image Store
Archive
Display
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60Instrumentation
- Command and control centre
- Sends synchronising pulses around the system
- Each pulse corresponds to a command to send a
new pulse from the transducer - Determines the pulse repetition frequency (PRF)
PRF 1 / time per line c / 2D Where c is
speed of sound and D is maximum scan depth If
there are N lines, then Frame Rate c / 2ND
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61Instrumentation
- Transmitter
- Responds to clock commands by generating high
voltage pulses to excite transducer - Transducer
- Sends out short ultrasound pulses when excited
- Detects returning echoes and presents them as
small electrical signals
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62Instrumentation
- AD Converter
- Converts analogue echo signals into digital
signals for further processing - Needs to
- Be fast enough to cope with highest frequencies
- Have sufficient levels to create adequate grey
scales (e.g. 256 or 512)
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63Instrumentation
Grey level
- Signal Processor
- Carries out
- TGC application
- Overall gain
- Signal compression fits very large dynamic
range ultrasound signal on to limited greyscale
display dynamic range - Demodulation removal of the carrier
(ultrasound) frequency
Liver
Heart
Linear
Input Amp
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64Instrumentation
- Image Store
- Takes z (brightness) signal from processor
- Positions it in image memory using x (depth) and
y (element position) information from beam
controller - Assembles image for each frame
- Presents assembled image to display
- Typically have capacity to store 100-200 frames
to allow cine-loop
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65Ultrasound Safety
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66Ultrasound Safety
- Hazard and Risk
- Hazard describes the nature of the danger or
threat (e.g. burning, falling, etc) - Risk takes into account the severity of the
potential consequences (e.g. death, injury) and
the probability of occurrence - There are two main hazards associated with
ultrasound - - Tissue heating
- - Cavitation
- But is there any risk???
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67Ultrasound Safety
- Tissue Heating
- During a scan some of the ultrasound energy is
absorbed by the exposed tissue and converted to
heat causing temperature elevation - Elevated temperature affects normal cell
function - The risk associated with this hazard depends on
the - - Degree of temperature elevation
- - Duration of the elevation
- - Nature of the exposed tissue
Rate of energy absorption per unit volume q
2??I Where ? absorption coefficient, ?
frequency, I intensity
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68Ultrasound Safety
- Tissue Heating
- Thermal effects in patient are complex
- Temperature increase will be fastest at the
focus resulting in a temperature gradient - Heat will be lost from focus by thermal
conduction - The transducer itself will heat up and this heat
will conduct into tissue enhancing the
temperature rise near the transducer - The presence of bone in the field will increase
the temperature rise - Blood flow will carry heat away from the exposed
tissues - It is impossible to accurately predict the
temperature increase occurring in the body and a
simple approach to estimate the temperature
increase is used to provide some guidance -
Thermal Index (TI)
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69Ultrasound Safety
- Thermal Index (TI)
- TI W / Wdeg
- W Transducer power exposing the tissue
- Wdeg The power required to cause a maximum
temperature rise of 1oC anywhere in the beam - TI is a rough estimate of the increase in
temperature that occurs in the region of the
ultrasound scan - A TI of 2.0 means that you can expect at
temperature rise of about 2oC - The difficulty with calculating the TI lies
mostly in the estimation of Wdeg - To simplify this problem there are three TIs
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70Ultrasound Safety
Soft-Tissue Thermal Index (TIS)
Maximum temperature
Soft tissue
Bone-at-Focus Thermal Index (TIB)
Maximum temperature
Bone
Soft tissue
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71Ultrasound Safety
Cranial (or Bone-at-Surface) Thermal Index (TIC)
Maximum temperature
Soft tissue
Bone
All three TI values depend linearly on the
acoustic power emitted by the transducer
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72Ultrasound Safety
- Does Temperature Rise Matter?
- Normal core temperature is 36-38oC and a
temperature of 42oC is largely incompatible with
life - During an ultrasound examination only a small
volume of tissue is exposed and the human body is
quite capable of recovering from such an event - Some regions are more sensitive such as
reproductive cells, unborn fetus, and the CNS - Temperature rises of between 3 and 8oC are
considered possible under certain conditions - There has been no confirmed evidence of damage
from diagnostic ultrasound exposure
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73Ultrasound Safety
- Cavitation
- Refers to the response of gas bubbles in a
liquid under the influence of an ultrasonic wave - Process of considerable complexity
- High peak pressure changes can cause
micro-bubbles in a liquid or near liquid medium
to expand resonance effect - A bubble may undergo very large size variations
and violently collapse - Very high localised pressures and temperature
are predicted that have potential to cause
cellular damage and free radical generation
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74Ultrasound Safety
Cavitation Micro-bubbles grow by resonance
processes Bubbles have a resonant frequency, fr,
depending on their radius, R. frR ? 3 Hz m This
suggests that typical diagnostic frequencies (3
MHz and above) cause resonance in bubbles with
radii of the order of 1 micrometer
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75Ultrasound Safety
- Mechanical Index (MI)
- The onset of cavitation only occurs above a
threshold for acoustic pressure - This has resulted in the formulation of a
mechanical index (MI) - Mechanical index is intended to quantify the
likelihood of onset of cavitation - MI pr / ?f
- where pr is the peak rarefaction pressure and f
is the ultrasound frequency - For MI ? 0.7 the physical conditions probably
cannot exist to support bubble growth and
collapse - Exceeding this threshold does not mean there
will be automatically be cavitation - Cavitation is more likely in the presence of
contrast agents and in the presence of gas bodies
such as in the lung and intestine
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76The End
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