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Ultrasound in surgery Faisal Ghairat History of US imaging • Lazzaro Spallanzi – Physiologist (Italia) • 1st person to provide that non-audible sound exist around us. • Demonstration included that blind folded bats could navigate around obstacles in the dark but bumped against them when their mouths where covered. (1794) • Spallazani’s Bat problem • With time the term echolocation was set: “bats require their senses of hearing in order to find their way” Piezo-electric effect • Year 1880 was the real breakthrough in ultrasound technology • Pierre and Jacques Currie (France) – discovered the “Piezo-electric effect”: the electrical charge that accumulates in certain solid materials (crystals, bone, protein, DNA etc) in response to applied mechanical stress. • Lead to development of the ultrasound transducer. • Transducer is the backbone of any ultrasound – converts ultrasound waves to electrical signals or vice versa Pierre and Jacques Currie Ultrasound transducer The Doppler effect • Johann Christian Doppler (1803-1853) Austria • “Hypothesized that the pitch of a sound would change if the source of the sound was moving” Doppler effect shortly described: change of wavelenght caused by motion of the source Physics of ultrasound (US) imaging • Sound is energy traveling through matter as a wave • The wave travels by compressing matter • Depending on the matter - the wave will travel at different velocities or directions • U/S probes emit and receive the energy as waves to form pictures Producing an image • Probe emits a sound wave pulse - measures the time from emission to return of the echo • Wave travels by displacing matter, expanding and compressing adjacent tissues • It generates an ultrasonic wave that is propagated, impeded, reflected, refracted, or attenuated by the tissues it encounters Cycle • 1 Cycle = 1 repetitive periodic oscillation Frequency • Number of cycles per second • Measured in Hertz (Hz) -Human Hearing 20 - 20,000 Hz -Ultrasound > 20,000 Hz -Diagnostic Ultrasound 2.5 to 10 MHz (this is what we use!) Wavelength • The length of one complete cycle • A measurable distance Types of transducers • The essential element of each ultrasound transducer is a piezoelectric crystal, serving both to generate and to receive ultrasound waves. • The following types of transducers are most often used in the critical ultrasound imaging: sector, linear and convex (standard or microconvex). Sector transducer • piezoelectric crystal arrangement: phasedarray (most commonly used) • operating frequency (bandwidth): 1-5 MHz (usually 3.5-5 MHz) • use: small acoustic windows, mainly echocardiography, gynaecological ultrasound, upper body ultrasound Linear Transducer • piezoelectric crystal arrangement: linear • operating frequency (bandwidth): 3-12 MHz (usually 5-7.5 MHz) • use: ultrasound of the superficial structures, e.g. obstetrics ultrasound, breast or thyroid ultrasound, vascular ultrasound Convex transducer • piezoelectric crystal arrangement: curvilinear, along the aperture • operating frequency (bandwidth): 1-5 MHz (usually 3.5-5 MHz) • use: useful in all ultrasound types except echocardiography, typically abdominal, pelvic and lung (micro-convex transducer) ultrasound Important • An ultrasound transducer is the most important and usually the most expensive element of the ultrasound machine, so it should be used carefuly, which means the following: • do not throw, drop or knock the transducer, • do not allow to spoil the transducer`s duct, • wipe the gel from the transducer after each use, • do not sluice with alcohol-based confections. Types of US presentations • Most ultrasounds are done using a transducer on the surface of the skin. Sometimes, however, doctors and technicians can get a better diagnostic image by inserting a special transducer into one of the body's natural openings: • In a transvaginal ultrasound, a transducer wand is placed in a woman’s vagina to get images of her uterus and ovaries. • A transrectal ultrasound is sometimes used in the diagnosis of prostate conditions. • A transesophageal echocardiogram uses the transducer probe in the esophagus so that the sonographer can obtain clearer images of the heart. Transvaginal ultrasound Transrectal ultrasound • Additionally, ultrasound technology has advanced to allow for different types of imaging: • Doppler is a special type of ultrasound that creates images of blood flow through vessels. • 3D imaging adds another dimension to the ultrasound image, creating threedimensional interpretations rather than the flat twodimensional images that are made with traditional ultrasound. A-mode one dimensional A-mode (amplitude mode) is the simplest type of ultrasound. A single transducer scans a line through the body with the echoes plotted on screen as a function of depth. Today used only in opthalmology B – mode (brigntness modulation) • The B mode most commonly used today, relates the brightness of the image to the amplitude of the US wave. • Thus, denser sructures appear brighter (i.e. whiter more echogenic) on the image because they reflect the US waves better. M-mode • The M-mode was the first ultrasound modality to record display moving echoes from the heart, and thus the motion could be interpreted in terms of myocardial and valvular function. The M-modes were originally recorded without access to 2dimensional images. Doppler Ultrasound • A Doppler ultrasound test uses reflected sound waves to see how blood flows through a blood vessel. It helps doctors evaluate blood flow through major arteries and veins, such as those of the arms, legs, and neck. It can show blocked or reduced flow of blood through narrow areas in the major arteries of the neck that could cause a stroke. It also can reveal blood clots in leg veins (deep vein thrombosis, or DVT) that could break loose and block blood flow to the lungs (pulmonary embolism). Color Doppler • The direction of blood flow is assigned red or blue, indicating flow toward or away from the ultrasound transducer. Color Doppler • Transducer perpendicular to radial artery (no flow is detected) Color Doppler • Transducer aiming away from the artery (flow in Blue) Color Doppler • Transducer aiming towards the artery (flow in Red) Intraoperative US • Intraoperative ultrasound (IOUS) is a dynamic imaging modality that provides interactive and timely information during surgical procedures. Because the transducer is in direct contact with the organ being examined, highresolution images can be obtained that are not degraded by air, bone, or overlying soft tissues. Intraoperative ultrasound (liver) • Here is a intraoperative picture of liver metastasis from colorectal cancer • dfsdf Laparoscopic ultrasound used in staging of patient with adenocarcinoma of pancreas US in fields other than surgery • Ultrasound is used in many different fields • E.g like we talked earlier about: Bats and porpoises, they use ultrasound for locating prey and obstacles. • Dogs with normal hearing can hear ultrasound. A dog whistle exploits this by emitting a high frequency sound to call to a dog. Weapons • Ultrasound has been studied as a basis for sonic weapons, for applications such as riot control, disorientation of attackers, up to lethal levels of sound. Ultrasonic cleaning • An ultrasonic cleaning is a process that uses ultrasound (usually from 20–400 kHz) and an appropriate cleaning solvent (sometimes ordinary tap water) to clean items e.g jewelry Examples of US imaging Acute appendicitis Spleen injury • Ultrasound terms: • Hyperechoic – more echogenic (brighter) than normal • Hypoechoic – less echogenic (darker) than normal • Isoechoic – the same echogenicity as another tissue Remember • Ultrasound terms: • Hyperechoic – more echogenic (brighter) than normal • Hypoechoic – less echogenic (darker) than normal • Isoechoic – the same echogenicity as another tissue Remember • A good mnemonic for echogenicity is: • “my cat loves sunny places” • Taking the first letter from each word, the tissues go from hypoechoic to hyperechoic relative to each other. The renal medulla (inner portion of the kidney) is normally more hypoechoic than the renal cortex (outer portion of the kidney), which in turn is more hypoechoic than the liver, spleen and prostate