Title: IMAGING TECHNIQUES For Vascular Sonography
1IMAGING TECHNIQUESFor Vascular Sonography
- B-Mode Imaging
- Doppler Spectral Analysis
- Color Doppler Flow Imaging
- Power Doppler
2B-mode Imaging
- Technologist must understand the relationship
of image quality to power gain - Increasing power and gain may degrade image
quality - Maintain perpendicular incidence as much as
possible - Understand controls and their effect on image
- Power
- Gain
- Dynamic range
- Depth, etc.
3Perpendicular IncidenceMaintain perpendicular
incidence
This
Not this!
4DepthKeep vessel of interest as close to the
center of image as possible
Appropriate image depth
Too much image depth
5Dynamic RangeDecrease the dynamic range to
decrease intraluminal echoes
40 dB
60 dB
6Color Doppler
7Retrograde Flow
8Color Doppler Flow Imaging
- Pulsed-wave Doppler
- Color saturation is based on mean flow
within the vessel - Uses autocorrelation to determine the mean flow
velocity - Evaluate for
- Presence of flow
- Direction of flow
- In relation to the sampling angle
- Quality of flow
- Laminar vs. turbulent
- Relative mean velocity (color saturation)
9Color Doppler - Guidelines
- Understand color orientation
- Red over blue
- Flow towards signal will be red
- Flow away from the signal will be blue
- Blue over red (inverted)
- Flow towards signal will be blue
- Flow away from the signal will be red
- Color baseline
- In most situations the color baseline will be
maintained in the center - Positive and negative flow scales will be equal
10Color Doppler - Guidelines
- Know the normal direction of flow in the vessel
being evaluated - Artery vs. vein
- Neck
- Artery right to left and vein left to right
- Abdomen extremities
- Artery left to right and vein right to left
- Steer the color box appropriately
- Perpendicular vessel
- Steer the color box and set the color orientation
properly - Vessel progressing deep to the right on image
- Steer the color box left to right
- Vessel progressing deep to the left on image
- Steer the color box right to left
- Transverse imaging
- Generally the color box will be center steered
11Color Doppler - Guidelines
- Set an appropriate color scale
- The greater the expected mean flow in the vessel
being evaluated the higher the color scale
setting - Arterial studies will generally have a higher
scale setting then venous studies - Doppler gain
- Increase or decrease to show color within the
vessel which extends to limits of the vessel wall - Overgaining may mask pathology
- Undergaining may lead to false positive for
occlusion
12Color Scale Orientation
Scale
0 Baseline - No Doppler Shift
Orientation
13Color Box - Steering
Right to Left
Left to Right
Center
14Presence or Absence of Flow
15Color Doppler ScaleColor Doppler Aliasing
Color scale 19.2 cm/s PRF 2000
16Color Doppler Flow Imaging
Appropriate scale setting
Color Scale 33.6 cm/s PRF 3500
17Wall Filters
- High pass filter
- Spectral and color Doppler
- Allow high level signals to pass
- Filters out low level noise
- Color priority
- Allows for more or less color saturation
- High priority
- Greater color saturation
- Low priority
- Lower level of color saturation
- More gray scale information
18Color DopplerWhats wrong with this?
19Power Doppler
- More sensitive to flow than color Doppler
- Very low dependence on angle
- Based on the amplitude of the returning Doppler
signal - Greater the amplitude of the returning signal the
better the representation of flow - No directional information
- Flow is encoded one color, independent of
direction - Some manufacturers are engineering directional
power Doppler into their machines - Subject to blooming of the display due to very
high sensitivity
20Power Doppler
21Spectral Doppler
22Doppler Spectral Analysis
- Pulsed-wave Doppler
- Uses Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) instead of
autocorrelation - Evaluate for
- Presence of flow
- Direction of flow
- In relation to the sampling angle
- Quality velocity of flow
- Laminar vs. turbulent
- Peak systolic velocity (PSV)
- End diastolic (EDV)
- Mean velocity (MV)
23Spectral Doppler - Terminology
- Doppler effect
- Frequency (Doppler) shift
- Doppler equation
- Incidence angle
- Angle correction
- Doppler
- Gain
- Baseline
- Scale
- Wall filters
- Aliasing
- Pulse Repetition Frequency (PRF)
- Nyquist Limit
24Spectral Doppler - Terminology
- Velocity
- Systolic
- Diastolic
- Mean
- A/B ratio compares one velocity to another
- Systolic Velocity Ratio (SVR)
- Peak Velocity Ratio (PVR)
- Diastolic Velocity Ratio Diastolic/Systolic
Ratio (DSR) - Resistivity Index
- Pulsatility Index
- Low resistance waveform
- High resistance waveform
25Doppler Effect
- Usefulness in diagnostic ultrasound
- Detect quantify the existence of moving blood
cells - Information pertaining to velocity and amplitude
is displayed in the Doppler information - Determine their direction
- Toward the source
- Away from the source
- Antegrade
- Retrograde
- Velocity
- Peak systolic
- End diastolic
- Mean
26Spectral Doppler
- Sonographer must understand relationship of flow
direction to the Doppler incident angle - Positive or negative, i.e. toward or away from
- Neck vessels
- Doppler incident angle left to right
- Arteries will exhibit a positive Doppler shift
- Veins will exhibit a negative Doppler shift
- Doppler incident angle right to left (inverted)
- Arteries will exhibit a negative Doppler shift
- Veins will exhibit a positive Doppler shift
- Abdominal and extremity vessels
- Opposite that of the neck vessels
27Doppler Spectral AnalysisRECOMMENDATIONS
- Maintain a spectral Doppler angle as close to 60
as possible. - NEVER 60
- Over angle correction
- overestimation of velocities
- Under angle correction
- underestimation of velocities
- Angle correct to the vessel wall
28Understanding the Doppler ANGLE
- Doppler equation states that the most accurate
frequency shifts, therefore, calculated
velocities, are obtained at 0. - A 0 Doppler incidence is always assumed for
cardiac and transcranial Doppler applications. - Evaluation of vessels at 0 is, in general, not
practical. - Vessels which run parallel to the skin surface
preclude the use of 0.
29Doppler Angle
- Doppler equation states that any detection
angle, Doppler beam to blood vessel, other
than 0 will lead to a diminution of the
returning signal. - The majority of vascular Doppler diagnostic
criteria have been assembled utilizing an
incidence angle of 60.
30Doppler Spectral AnalysisTheta (?)
31Doppler Equation
?FDetected Frequency shift FoTransmitted
Frequency 2Transmit/Receive time c speed of
sound in soft tissue Vvelocity of
blood Cos?cosign Thetacosign of incidence angle
Theta (?) Cosign 0
1.0 60
0.5 90
0.0
32Doppler Effect
- Usefulness in diagnostic ultrasound
- Detect quantify the existence of moving blood
cells - Determine their direction
- Toward the source
- Away from the source
- Antegrade
- Retrograde
- Velocity
- Peak systolic
- End diastolic
- Mean
- Q How? A Frequency shift
33Doppler (Frequency) Shift
- ?f caused by motion
- Equal to the received frequency minus the source
frequency - For an approaching reflector, ?f is positive, for
a receding reflector, ?f is negative - Doppler shifts in diagnostic ultrasound are in
kHz and are then converted to velocity, i.e. m/s,
cm/s
34Proper Angle Correction Parallel To Posterior
Vessel Wall
PSV 99 cm/s EDV 32 cm/s
35Spectral Doppler Angle Undercorrection
PSV 69 cm/s EDV 22 cm/s
36Spectral Doppler Angle Overcorrection
PSV 129 cm/s EDV 41 cm/s
37Improper Angle Correction60 IS NOT always 60
PSV 77 cm/s EDV 21 cm/s
38Proper Angle CorrectionParallel To Posterior
Vessel Wall
PSV 92 cm/s EDV 25 cm/s
3960 Spectral Doppler IncidencePSV144 cm/s
4070 Spectral Doppler IncidencePSV188 cm/s
4150 Spectral Doppler IncidencePSV113 cm/s
42Doppler GainUngaining
43Doppler GainOvergained
44Doppler Baseline Baseline is set too high
45Doppler Baseline
Appropriate setting
46Doppler Aliasing
Inappropriate scale setting
47Aliasing The Fix
- Increase the PRF
- Increase the scale
- PRF of pulses occurring in one second
- Typical PRF in diagnostic US, 4-10 kHz
- Aliasing occurs at ½ the PRF, which is the
Nyquist Limit - Decrease the sampling depth
- Find a sampling window which shows the target
vessel more superficially - Use a lower frequency transducer
- Increase the Doppler angle
- E.g. change from a 50 degree angle to a 60 degree
angle - Use a CW Doppler
- Not an option in vascular imaging
- Shift the baseline
- Not a true fix
- Will only work if the baseline was
inappropriately set
48Doppler Sample Volume1.5 mm
49Doppler Sample Volume 5.0 mm
50Doppler Sample Volume7.5 mm
51Spectral BroadeningDue to vessel stenosis
52OK to determine artery vs. vein only
53OK to determine artery vs. vein only
54High vs. Low Resistance
- The resistance of the vascular bed, which a
particular vessel is supplying. - Determined by flow, or the lack of it, in
diastole. - Qualities are variable in some vessels.
- High resistance no, or low diastolic flow
- Typical for peripheral arteries
- Changes in response to
- Exercise
- Temperature
- Arterial occlusive disease (PVD, PAD)
- Low resistance flow through diastole
- Internal carotid artery
- Renal artery
- Celiac trunk its branches
55High vs. Low Resistance
ICA Low Resistance
ECA High Resistance
CFA Higher Resistance