AAPM/RSNA physics tutorial for residents. Topics in US: B-mode US: basic concepts and new technology

Radiographics. 2003 Jul-Aug;23(4):1019-33. doi: 10.1148/rg.234035034.

Abstract

Ultrasonography (US) has been used in medical imaging for over half a century. Current US scanners are based largely on the same basic principles used in the initial devices for human imaging. Modern equipment uses a pulse-echo approach with a brightness-mode (B-mode) display. Fundamental aspects of the B-mode imaging process include basic ultrasound physics, interactions of ultrasound with tissue, ultrasound pulse formation, scanning the ultrasound beam, and echo detection and signal processing. Recent technical innovations that have been developed to improve the performance of modern US equipment include the following: tissue harmonic imaging, spatial compound imaging, extended field of view imaging, coded pulse excitation, electronic section focusing, three-dimensional and four-dimensional imaging, and the general trend toward equipment miniaturization. US is a relatively inexpensive, portable, safe, and real-time modality, all of which make it one of the most widely used imaging modalities in medicine. Although B-mode US is sometimes referred to as a mature technology, this modality continues to experience a significant evolution in capability with even more exciting developments on the horizon.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Health Physics / education*
  • Health Physics / instrumentation
  • Health Physics / methods*
  • Health Physics / trends
  • Ultrasonography / instrumentation
  • Ultrasonography / methods*
  • Ultrasonography / trends*