Ultrasound Image Optimization for the Interventional Radiologist

Author(s):  
Gowthaman Gunabushanam ◽  
Leslie M. Scoutt
Author(s):  
Antoun Nader ◽  
Greesh John ◽  
Mark C. Kendall

This chapter discusses the basics of ultrasound wave emission and capture, probe selection, image-optimization techniques, artifact generation, and potential adverse biological effects. The rapid improvement of ultrasound image processing allows a dynamic exam with a reliable real-time assessment of the target tissue, the needle trajectory, and the injectate deposition. This, combined with ease of portability and absence of radiation, means the use of ultrasound guidance in regional anesthesia and interventional pain management is rapidly expanding. Basic understanding of ultrasound knobology principles is mandated by most societies using ultrasound technology and is essential for optimal use.


2017 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 1479-1485 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bianca Carpentier ◽  
Jessica Hayward ◽  
Lori Strachowski

Author(s):  
Brooke Albright-Trainer

Chapter 1 reviews basic ultrasound physics and introduces ultrasound machine functionality. Ultrasound medical imaging (also known as sonography) is a diagnostic imaging tool that uses high-frequency sound waves to create images of structures in the body. It can show details that a still image like a radiograph cannot, such as blood flow or needle guidance to a nerve. Several tools and techniques are useful in acquiring the best ultrasound image. The chapter covers the functions of many ultrasound machine knobs, machine operation, ultrasound operating modes, and ultrasound image optimization. It also examines different types of ultrasound probes and their uses.


2020 ◽  
Vol 06 (01) ◽  
pp. E14-E24
Author(s):  
David Zander ◽  
Sebastian Hüske ◽  
Beatrice Hoffmann ◽  
Xin-Wu Cui ◽  
Yi Dong ◽  
...  

AbstractUltrasound is a ubiquitous and indispensable diagnostic and therapeutic tool in medicine. Due to modern equipment and automatic image optimization, the introduction of ultrasound imaging currently requires only little technical and physical knowledge. However, in-depth knowledge of the device functions and underlying mechanisms is essential for optimal image adjustment and documentation. From a medical as well as an aesthetic point of view, the goal should always be to achieve the best possible image quality. The first part of this article provides an overview of the handling of ultrasound systems, fundamental adjustments, and their optimization in B-mode ultrasound.


Author(s):  
Mircea Fotino ◽  
D.C. Parks

In the last few years scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) has made it possible and easily accessible to visualize surfaces of conducting specimens at the atomic scale. Such performance allows the detailed characterization of surface morphology in an increasing spectrum of applications in a wide variety of fields. Because the basic imaging process in STM differs fundamentally from its equivalent in other well-established microscopies, good understanding of the imaging mechanism in STM enables one to grasp the correct information content in STM images. It thus appears appropriate to explore by STM the structure of amorphous carbon films because they are used in many applications, in particular in the investigation of delicate biological specimens that may be altered through the preparation procedures.All STM images in the present study were obtained with the commercial instrument Nanoscope II (Digital Instruments, Inc., Santa Barbara, California). Since the importance of the scanning tip for image optimization and artifact reduction cannot be sufficiently emphasized, as stressed by early analyses of STM image formation, great attention has been directed toward adopting the most satisfactory tip geometry. The tips used here consisted either of mechanically sheared Pt/Ir wire (90:10, 0.010" diameter) or of etched W wire (0.030" diameter). The latter were eventually preferred after a two-step procedure for etching in NaOH was found to produce routinely tips with one or more short whiskers that are essentially rigid, uniform and sharp (Fig. 1) . Under these circumstances, atomic-resolution images of cleaved highly-ordered pyro-lytic graphite (HOPG) were reproducibly and readily attained as a standard criterion for easily recognizable and satisfactory performance (Fig. 2).


2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 407-417
Author(s):  
A.A. Khilchuk ◽  
◽  
S.V. Vlasenko ◽  
S.G. Scherbak ◽  
A.M. Sarana ◽  
...  

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