Waves from stationary and moving
sources
Stationary Moving
Doppler shift
Doppler shift is the
difference between the
transmitted and received
frequencies.
Transmitted and received
frequencies are in the MHz
range
Doppler shift frequencies
often in audible range
Continuous Wave (CW)
Doppler
Ultrasound transmitted continuously
rather than in pulses
Some units have two-element
transducers one transmitting and the
other receiving
Arrays are sometimes used with CW;
different groups transmit and receive.
Advantages of CW
Doppler
Instruments can be made extremely
simple, inexpensive
Useful when you do not have good
information (such as a B-mode image) to
help pinpoint vessel of interest
DOES NOT ALIAS
Disadvantages of CW
Doppler
No information about direction of flow
Only detects magnitude of doppler
frequency.
Pulsed wave doppler
Pulsed-wave Doppler consists of
intermittent (pulsed) bursts of ultrasound
at a frequency called the pulse repetition
frequency (PRF).
A single ultrasound crystal sends and
receives sound beams.
These intermittent pulsed bursts of
ultrasound are reflected off the moving
red blood cells and received at intervals
between the transmitted pulses
Signals returning from different depths
are received at different times
Discrimination of signal from different
depth
Advantages of Pulsed
Doppler
Precise depth at which flow is detected
can be specified
Precise location of selected vessel of
interest amidst adjacent vessels.
Direction of flow
PRF(Pulse repetition
frequency)
Maximum PRF depends on depth of sample
volume .PRF varies inversely with the depth
of the sample volume.
When sample volume is shallow, PRF can
be higher
When it is deep, PRF must be lower
Thus, for a given ultrasound frequency, a
higher velocity can be detected at shallower
depths than at deeper depths.
Nyquist Limit
The “Nyquist limit” is equal to one half the PRF
(Nyquist limit = PRF/2)
If the frequency shift is higher than Nyquist
frequency, aliasing occurs
As PRF varies inversely with the depth of the
sample volume, to increase the velocities that
can be measured with PW Doppler without
aliasing, the sample volume should be placed
closer to the transducer.
Sample Volume (SV)
Aliasing
Aliasing is produced when PRF is less
than twice the doppler signal frequency.
Limitation on the maximum doppler
frequency that can be detected from a
given depth.
To sample a given volume sampling
frequency (PRF) is used.
In deeper tissue sampling, the
maximum PRF available is limited.
If the Doppler frequency exceeds ½ the PRF,
aliasing occurs
Aliasing produces false frequencies, reversal, etc.
To get rid of aliasing:
Increase the
velocity scale
Change the
baseline
Use a lower
ultrasound
frequency
transducer
Energy Mode (Power mode)
Does not display
Doppler shift
frequency
Displays amplitude,
intensity or energy
in the Doppler
signal
Direction( Colour vs Power
Doppler)
Energy mode does not display direction.
Aliasing not displayed in energy mode.
Aliasing( Colour vs Power
Doppler)
Energy mode does not display aliasing.
COLOUR MAP
INVERSION OF COLOUR FLOW
INVERSION OF SPCTRAL FLOW