Ultrasonic colour Doppler imaging
Publication: Research - peer-review › Journal article – Annual report year: 2011
Ultrasonic colour Doppler is an imaging technique that combines anatomical information
derived using ultrasonic pulse-echo techniques with velocity information derived using ultrasonic
Doppler techniques to generate colour-coded maps of tissue velocity superimposed on
grey-scale images of tissue anatomy. The most common use of the technique is to image
the movement of blood through the heart, arteries and veins, but it may also be used to
image the motion of solid tissues such as the heart walls. Colour Doppler imaging is now provided
on almost all commercial ultrasound machines, and has been found to be of great value
in assessing blood flow in many clinical conditions. Although the method for obtaining the
velocity information is in many ways similar to the method for obtaining the anatomical
information, it is technically more demanding for a number of reasons. It also has a
number of weaknesses, perhaps the greatest being that in conventional systems, the velocities
measured and thus displayed are the components of the flow velocity directly towards or away
from the transducer, while ideally the method would give information about the magnitude
and direction of the three-dimensional flow vectors. This review briefly introduces the principles
behind colour Doppler imaging and describes some clinical applications. It then
describes the basic components of conventional colour Doppler systems and the methods
used to derive velocity information from the ultrasound signal. Next, a number of new techniques
that seek to overcome the vector problem mentioned above are described. Finally,
some examples of vector velocity images are presented.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Interface Focus |
| Publication date | 2011 |
| Volume | 1 |
| Journal number | 4 |
| Pages | 490-502 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published |
| Citations | Web of Science® Times Cited: 4 |
|---|
Keywords
- Ultrasonic colour Doppler, Imaging, Clinical applications
ID: 5558322