Chapter 21: Ultrasonography Flashcards

1
Q

What are the types of US?

A
A-mode
B-mode
M-mode
Doppler
Duplex US
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2
Q

What is an A-mode US?

A

The simplest

Spikes along a line represent the signal amplitude at a certain depth

Used mainly in ophthalmology

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3
Q

What is a B-mode US?

A

Mode most often used in diagnostic imaging

Each echo is depicted as a dot, and teh sonogram is made up of thousands of these dots

Can depict real time motion

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4
Q

What is M-mode US?

A

Used to show moving structures such as blood flow or motion of the heart valves

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5
Q

What is a Doppler US?

A

Uses the Doppler effect to assess blood flow

Used for vascular US

Pulsed Doppler devices emit short bursts of energy that allow for an accurate localization of the echo source

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6
Q

What is a duplex ultrasonography?

A

Used in vascular studies

Refers to the simultaneous use of both grayscale or color Doppler to visualize the structure of and flow within a vessel and spectral Doppler to quantitate flow

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7
Q

What are the advantages of US?

A

No ionizing radiation

No known long term side effects

“Real time” images

Produces little to no patient discomfort

Small, portable, inexpensive, and ubiquitous

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8
Q

What are the disadvantages of US?

A

Difficulty penetrating through bone

Gas-filled Structures reduce its utility

Penetration may be difficult in obese patients

Dependent on the skills of the operator doing the scanning

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9
Q

What are the uses of US for pregnancy?

A
Fetal presence and gestational age
Fetal abnormalities and viability
The presence of multiple pregnancies
Placental localization
Amniotic fluid volume
Intrauterine growth retardation
Helping to guide invasive studies such as amniocentesis, chorionic villus sampling, and intrauterine transfusions
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10
Q

What are CNS abnormalities diagnosable using US?

A
Hydrocephalus
Abnormalities of prosencephalon
A genesis of the corpus callous
Intrauterine infections
Cysts
Meningomyelocele
Anencephaly
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11
Q

What skeletal abnormalities can be diagnosed on US?

A
Dwarfism
Skeletal dysphasia
Achondroplasia
Osteogenesis imperfecta
Asphyxiating thoracic dysplasia
Limb anomalies
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12
Q

What GI abnormalities can be diagnosed using US?

A
Esophageal atresia
Tracheoesophageal fistula
Duodenal atresia
Small and large bowel obstruction
Abdominal wall defects
Congenital diaphragmatic hernias
Choledochal cyst
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13
Q

What Genitourinary tract abnormalities can be diagnosed using US?

A
Renal agenesis
Congenital ureteropelvic junction and ureterovesical junction obstruction
Bladder outlet obstruction
Multicystic dysplastic Kidney
Poly cystic kidney disease
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14
Q

What cardiac anomalies can be diagnosed with US?

A
Hypoplastic left heart syndrome
Tricuspid atresia
Endocardium cushion defects
Ebstein anomaly
Tetralogy of Fallot
Transposition of the great vessels
Coarctation of the aorta
Cardiac arrhythmias
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15
Q

What three components are there of a sonogram?

A

Production of a high frequency sound wave

Reception of a reflected wave or echo

Conversion of the echo into the actual image

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16
Q

Define echogenic

A

A tissue that reflects many echoes and is usually depicted as bright or white on the sonogram

17
Q

Define sonolucent

A

A tissue that has few or no echoes and usually depicts as being dark or black

18
Q

How do gallstones appear on US?

A

They are characteristically echogenic and produce acoustical shadowing because they reflect most of the signal

19
Q

What is biliary sludge?

A

Biliary sludge can be found in the lumen of the gallbladder and is often associated with biliary stasis; it is also echogenic but doesn’t produce acoustical shadowing

20
Q

What is the appearance of obstructive uropathy?

A

A dilated calyceal system

21
Q

How does medical renal disease appear on US?

A

The renal parenchyma becomes more echogenic than the liver and spleen which is the opposite of how it is normally

22
Q

How does US diagnose a scrotal torsion?

A

By demonstrating the absence of flow in the torsed testicle

23
Q

How large is the normal abdominal aorta on US?

A

< 3 cm.

24
Q

What are the most common tumors of the uterus?

A

Leiomyomas confined to the myometrium; uterine masses are solid

25
Q

What are the most common masses in the ovary?

A

Functional cyst

26
Q

How does an adenomyosis appear on US?

A

The uterus is enlarged and contain myometrial cystic spaces, a thickened posterior uterine wall, and decreased uterine echogenic its

27
Q

What are functional cysts and how do they appear on US?

A

Follicular cysts and corpus luteum cysts of the ovary

They are well defined, thin walled, anechoic structures with homogenous internal fluid density; they can contain echogenic material if hemorrhage occurs into the cyst

28
Q

What are nonfunctional cysts of the ovary?

A

Dermoid cyst
Endometriosis
Polycystic ovaries

29
Q

What is Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)?

A

Is a term used to describe a group of infectious diseases affecting the uterus, Fallopian tubes, and ovaries

Most begin as transient endometritis

30
Q

Where is ascites best visualized on US?

A

Right upper quadrant between the liver and diaphragm

31
Q

How would you see appendicitis on an US?

A

Appendix may be blind-ending, aperistaltic tube with a 6 mm or more diameter

It is noncompressible and may be tender when palpate with the probe

A fecalith may be present in 30% of the cases

32
Q

Where are ectopic pregnancies usually seen on US?

A

Tubal locations and occur near the fimbriated (ovarian) end

33
Q

How do you determine a molar pregnancy?

A

Uterine size that is disproportionately large for the dates of gestation and B-HCG levels >100,000