Title: Doppler Ultrasound
1Doppler Ultrasound
- Resident Categorical Course
2Laminar Flow
- also called parabolic flow
- fluid layers slide over one another
- central portion of fluid moves at maximum speed
- flow near vessel wall hardly moves at all
- friction with wall
3Turbulent Flow
- random chaotic
- individual particles flow in all directions
- net flow is forward
- Often occurs beyond obstructionsuch as plaque on
vessel wall
4Flow, Pressure Resistance
- Quantity of flow is function of
- Pressure
- Resistance
- Pressure
- Heart provides pulsating pressure
5Flow and Pressure
6Resistance to Flow
- more resistance lower flow rate
- resistance affected by
- fluids viscosity
- vessel length
- vessel diameter
7Resistance to Flow
Less Viscosity More Flow
More Viscosity Less Flow
8Resistance to Flow
Longer Vessel Less Flow
Shorter Vessel More Flow
9Resistance to Flow
Larger Diameter More Flow
Smaller Diameter Less Flow
10Flow Variations
- Large fluctuation in pressure flow in arteries
with pulse - Less fluctuation in pressure flow in veins
- pulse variations dampened by arterial system
11Normal Vessel
- Distensible
- Expands contracts with
- pressure changes
- Changes over cardiac cycle
- Vessel expands during systole
- Vessel contracts during diastole
12Flow Rate Measurements
- Volume flow rate
- Volume of liquid passing a point per unit time
- Example
- 100 ml / second
13Flow Rate Measurements
- Linear flow rate
- Distance liquid moves past a point per unit time
- Example
- 10 cm / second
14Flow Rate Measurements
- Volume Flow Rate Linear flow rate X Cross
Sectional Area
15Flow Rate Measurements
- Volume Flow Rate Linear flow rate X
Cross-sectional Area
High Velocity Small Cross-section
Low Velocity Large Cross-section
Same Volume Flow Rate
16Volume Flow Rates
- constant volume flow rate in all parts of closed
system
Any change in flow rate would mean youre gaining
or losing fluid.
17Stenosis
- narrowing in a vessel
- fluid must speed up in stenosis to maintain
constant flow volume - no net gain or loss of flow
- turbulent flow common downstream of stenosis
18Stenosis
- If narrowing is short in length
- Little increase in flow resistance
- Little effect on volume flow rate
- If narrowing is long
- Resistance to flow increased
- Volume flow rate decreased
19Doppler Shift
- difference between received transmitted
frequency - caused by relative motion between sound source
receiver - Frequency shift indicative of reflector speed
OUT
IN
20Doppler Angle
- angle between sound travel flow
- 0 degrees
- flow in direction of sound travel
- 90 degrees
- flow perpendicular to sound travel
21Doppler Angle
- Angle between direction of sound and direction of
fluid flow
q
22Doppler Sensing
- Flow vector can be separated into two vectors
- Only flow parallel to sound sensed by scanner!!!
- Sensed flow always lt actual flow
Flow parallel to sound
Flow perpendicular to sound
23Doppler Sensing
Actual flow (AF)
q
Sensed flow (SF)
q
24Doppler Equation
2 X fo X v X cosq f D fe
- fo -------------------------
c
q
v
- fD Doppler Shift in MHz
- fe echo of reflected frequency (MHz)
- fo operating frequency (MHz)
- v reflector speed (m/s)
- q angle between flow sound propagation
- c speed of sound in soft tissue (m/s)
25Relationships
2 X fo X v X cosq f D fe
- fo -------------------------
c
- Positive Doppler shift
- reflector moving toward transducer
- echoed frequency gt operating frequency
- Negative Doppler shift
- reflector moving away from transducer
- echoed frequency lt operating frequency
q
q
26Relationships
2 X fo X v X cosq f D fe
- fo -------------------------
c
q
- Doppler angle affects measured Doppler shift
- Larger angle
- Smaller cosine
- Small Doppler shift
27Simplified (?) Equation
2 X fo X v X cosq f D fe
- fo -------------------------
c
77 X fD (kHz) v (cm/s)
-------------------------- fo
(MHz) X cosq
Simplified
- Solve for reflector velocity
- Insert speed of sound for soft tissue
- Stick in some units
28Doppler Relationships
Constant
77 X fD (kHz) v (cm/s)
-------------------------- fo
(MHz) X cos?
?
- higher reflector speed results in greater Doppler
shift - higher operating frequency results in greater
Doppler shift - larger Doppler angle results in lower Doppler
shift
29Continuous Wave Doppler
- Audio presentation
- 2 transducers used
- one continuously transmits
- one continuously receives
30Continuous Wave DopplerReceiver Function
- receives reflected sound waves
- Subtract signals
- detects frequency shift
- typical shift 1/1000 th of source frequency
- usually in audible sound range
- Amplify subtracted signal
- Play directly on speaker
31Pulse Wave vs. Continuous Wave Doppler
32Doppler Pulses
- Different Imaging Doppler pulses
- short pulses required for imaging
- Accurate echo timing
- minimizes spatial pulse length
- optimizes axial resolution
- longer pulses required for Doppler analysis
- reduces bandwidth
- provide purer transmitted frequency
- important for accurate measurement of frequency
differences needed to calculate speed
33Color-Flow Display Features
- Imaged electronically scanned twice
- imaging scan processes echo intensity
- Doppler scan calculates Doppler shifts
- Reduced frame rates
- only 1 pulse required for imaging
- additional pulses required when multiple focuses
used - several pulses may be required along a scan line
to determine Doppler shift
34Duplex Doppler Gates
- operator defines active Doppler region (gate)
- only sound in gate analyzed
35Spectral Display
- Displays real-time range of frequencies received
- amplitude of each frequency indicated by
brightness - display indicates range of frequencies received
- corresponds to range of speeds of blood cells
- indicative of type of flow
- laminar, turbulent
36Absolute Speed Measurement
- Absolute speed measurements must include Doppler
angle - angle between flow sound propagation
- Indicated by operator
- Accuracy affects flow speed accuracy
37Relative Speed Measurement
- relative measurements can be useful
- Doppler angle not required
- indications of spectral broadening do not require
absolute measurements - ratio of peak-systolic to end-diastolic relative
flows independent of angle
38Color Doppler
- User defines window superimposed on gray scale
image - For each location in window scanner determines
- flow direction
- mean value
- Variance
- window size affects frame rate
- larger window slower scanning
- more Doppler pulses required
39Spectral vs. Color-Flow
- spectral Display shows detailed frequency data
for single location - Color Dopplers color represents complete
spectrum at each location in window
40Power Doppler
- AKA
- Energy Doppler
- Amplitude Doppler
- Doppler angiography
- Magnitude of color flow output displayed rather
than Doppler frequency signal - flow direction or different velocities not
displayed
"Color Power Angio" of the Circle of Willis