Ultrasound in medicine & biology
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Nov 2004
Validation of a sensitivity performance index test protocol and evaluation of colour Doppler sensitivity for a range of ultrasound scanners.
The ability to detect flow is the most crucial aspect of an ultrasound (US) system because, if flow cannot be detected, no other aspect of performance matters. The objectives of this study were to validate a Doppler "sensitivity performance index," a figure of merit, and to determine if it could be used to differentiate colour Doppler sensitivity performance in scanners of varying complexity. The sensitivity performance index was developed to give a combined measure of related aspects of sensitivity, such as the lowest detectable velocity, the vessel size and the penetration depth. ⋯ The effect of instrument settings was assessed for two transducers, the 4C3 curvilinear general-purpose transducer (Aspen) and the PVM375AT curvilinear general-purpose transducer (Nemio). The colour Doppler sensitivity performance was found to be significantly dependent on the clutter filter setting and the output power setting for both transducers tested. Users need to be aware of the effect of these settings on the colour Doppler sensitivity performance of their US scanner when interpreting the clinical significance of the colour Doppler information.
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Nov 2004
Intracranial collateral pathways assessed by contrast-enhanced three-dimensional transcranial color-coded sonography.
Individual parameter settings of the duplex machine and limited insonation angles may influence the visualization of small intracranial vessels in 2-D transcranial color-coded sonography. The aim of our study was the morphologic assessment of intracranial collateral pathways (first auditory area celiac artery, A(1)CA; anterior communicating artery, AComA; first parental generation celiac artery P(1)CA; posterior communicating artery, PComA) using 3-D transcranial color-coded duplex sonography (3-D TCCS) and digital subtraction angiography (DSA). A total of 41 patients with large vessel disease and 30 patients who had suffered subarachnoidal hemorrhage (mean age 52 +/- 15 years) were involved. ⋯ Compared with angiography or magnetic resonance (MR) angiography, 3-D sonography can be performed easily in critically ill patients on stroke units or intensive care units. The noninvasive assessment of the circle of Willis may be useful in patients who undergo carotid surgery without angiography. Combined with hemodynamic information, contrast-enhanced 3-D TCCS might increase the diagnostic impact of transcranial US.