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ABDOMINAL ULTRASOUND
Purpose
The
potential medical applications of ultrasound were first recognized in the 1940s
as an outgrowth of the sonar technology developed to detect submarines during
World War II. The first useful medical images were produced in the early 1950s,
and, by 1965, ultrasound quality had improved to the point that it came into
general medical use. Improvements in the technology, application, and
interpretation of ultrasound continue. Its low cost, versatility, safety and
speed have brought it into the top drawer of medical imaging
techniques.
While pelvic ultrasound is widely known and
commonly used for fetal monitoring during pregnancy, ultrasound
is also routinely used for general abdominal imaging. It has great advantage
over x-ray imaging technologies in that it does not damage tissues with ionizing
radiation. Ultrasound is also generally far better than plain x rays at
distinguishing the subtle variations of soft tissue structures, and can be used
in any of several modes, depending on the need at hand.
As an imaging tool,
abdominal ultrasound generally is warranted for patients afflicted with: chronic
or acute abdominal pain; abdominal trauma; an obvious or
suspected abdominal mass; symptoms of liver disease, pancreatic disease,
gallstones, spleen disease, kidney disease and urinary
blockage; or symptoms of an abdominal aortic aneurysm. Specifically:
- Abdominal
pain. Whether acute or chronic, pain can signal a serious problem--from organ
malfunction or injury to the presence of malignant growths. Ultrasound
scanning can help doctors quickly sort through potential causes when presented
with general or ambiguous symptoms. All of the major abdominal organs can be
studied for signs of disease that appear as changes in size, shape and
internal structure.
- Abdominal
trauma. After a serious accident, such as a car crash or a fall, internal
bleeding from injured abdominal organs is often the most serious threat to
survival. Neither the injuries nor the bleeding are immediately apparent.
Ultrasound is very useful as an initial scan when abdominal trauma is
suspected, and it can be used to pinpoint the location, cause, and severity of
hemorrhaging. In the case of puncture wounds, from a bullet
for example, ultrasound can locate the foreign object and provide a
preliminary survey of the damage. The easy portability and versatility of
ultrasound technology has brought it into common emergency room use, and even
into limited ambulance service.
- Abdominal
mass. Abnormal growths--tumors, cysts, abscesses, scar tissue and accessory
organs--can be located and tentatively identified with ultrasound. In
particular, potentially malignant solid tumors can be distinguished from
benign fluid-filled cysts and abscesses. Masses and malformations in any organ
or part of the abdomen can be found.
- Liver
disease. The types and underlying causes of liver disease are numerous, though
jaundice tends to be a general symptom. Ultrasound can
differentiate between many of the types and causes of liver malfunction, and
is particularly good at identifying obstruction of the bile ducts and
cirrhosis, which is characterized by abnormal fibrous growths
and reduced blood flow.
- Pancreatic
disease. Inflammation and malformation of the pancreas are readily identified
by ultrasound, as are pancreatic stones (calculi), which can disrupt proper
functioning.
- Gallstones.
Gallstones cause more hospital admissions than any other digestive malady.
These calculi can cause painful inflammation of the gallbladder and also
obstruct the bile ducts that carry digestive enzymes from the gallbladder and
liver to the intestines. Gallstones are readily identifiable with ultrasound.
- Spleen
disease. The spleen is particularly prone to injury during abdominal trauma.
It may also become painfully inflamed when beset with infection or
cancer. These conditions also lend themselves well to
ultrasonic inspection and diagnosis.
- Kidney
disease. The kidneys are also prone to traumatic injury and are the organs
most likely to form calculi, which can block the flow of urine and cause blood
poisoning (uremia). A variety of diseases causing distinct
changes in kidney morphology can also lead to complete kidney failure.
Ultrasound imaging has proven extremely useful in diagnosing kidney disorders.
- Abdominal
aortic aneurysm. This is a bulging weak spot in the abdominal aorta, which
supplies blood directly from the heart to the entire lower body. These
aneurysms are relatively common and increase in prevalence with age. A burst
aortic aneurysm is imminently life-threatening. However, they can be readily
identified and monitored with ultrasound before acute complications result.
Ultrasound technology can also be used for treatment purposes, most
frequently as a visual aid during surgical procedures-such as guiding needle
placement to drain fluid from a cyst, or to extract tumor cells for biopsy.
Increasingly, direct therapeutic applications for ultrasound are being
developed.
The direct therapeutic value of ultrasonic waves lies in their
mechanical nature. They are shock waves, just like audible sound, and vibrate
the materials through which they pass. These vibrations are mild, virtually
unnoticeable at the frequencies and intensities used for imaging. Properly
focused however, high-intensity ultrasound can be used to heat and physically
agitate targeted tissues.
High-intensity ultrasound is used routinely to
treat soft tissue injuries, such as strains, tears and associated scarring. The
heating and agitation are believed to promote rapid healing through increased
circulation. Strongly focused, high-intensity, high-frequency ultrasound can
also be used to physically destroy certain types of tumors, as well as
gallstones and other types of calculi. Developing new treatment applications for
ultrasound is an active area of medical
research.
Precautions
Properly performed, ultrasound
imaging is virtually without risk or side effects. Some patients report feeling
a slight tingling and/or warmth while being scanned, but most feel nothing at
all. Ultrasound waves of appropriate frequency and intensity are not known to
cause or aggravate any medical condition, though any woman who thinks she might
be pregnant should raise the issue with her doctor before undergoing an
abdominal ultrasound.
The value of ultrasound imaging as a medical tool,
however, depends greatly on the quality of the equipment used and the skill of
the medical personnel operating it. Improperly performed and/or interpreted,
ultrasound can be worse than useless if it indicates that a problem exists where
there is none, or fails to detect a significant condition. Basic ultrasound
equipment is relatively inexpensive to obtain, and any doctor with the equipment
can perform the procedure whether qualified or not. Patients should not hesitate
to verify the credentials of technicians and doctors performing ultrasounds, as
well as the quality of the equipment used and the benefits of the proposed
procedure.
In cases where ultrasound is used as a treatment tool, patients
should educate themselves about the proposed procedure with the help of their
doctors--as is appropriate before any surgical procedure. Also, any abdominal
ultrasound procedure, diagnostic or therapeutic, may be hampered by a patient's
body type or other factors, such as the presence of excessive bowel gas (which
is opaque to ultrasound). In particular, very obese people are often not good
candidates for abdominal
ultrasound.
Description
Ultrasound includes all sound
waves above the frequency of human hearing--about 20 thousand hertz, or cycles
per second. Medical ultrasound generally uses frequencies between one and 10
million hertz (1-10 MHz). Higher frequency ultrasound waves produce more
detailed images, but are also more readily absorbed and so cannot penetrate as
deeply into the body. Abdominal ultrasound imaging is generally performed at
frequencies between 2-5 MHz.
An ultrasound machine consists of two parts: the
transducer and the analyzer. The transducer both produces the sound waves that
penetrate the body and receives the reflected echoes. Transducers are built
around piezoelectric ceramic chips. (Piezoelectric refers to electricity that is
produced when you put pressure on certain crystals such as quartz). These
ceramic chips react to electric pulses by producing sound waves (they are
transmitting waves) and react to sound waves by producing electric pulses
(receiving). Bursts of high frequency electric pulses supplied to the transducer
cause it to produce the scanning sound waves. The transducer then receives the
returning echoes, translates them back into electric pulses and sends them to
the analyzer--a computer that organizes the data into an image on a television
screen.
Because sound waves travel through all the body's tissues at nearly
the same speed-about 3,400 miles per hour-the microseconds it takes for each
echo to be received can be plotted on the screen as a distance into the body.
The relative strength of each echo, a function of the specific tissue or organ
boundary that produced it, can be plotted as a point of varying brightness. In
this way, the echoes are translated into a picture. Tissues surrounded by bone
or filled with gas (the stomach, intestines and bowel) cannot be imaged using
ultrasound, because the waves are blocked or become randomly scattered.
Four
different modes of ultrasound are used in medical imaging:
- A-mode.
This is the simplest type of ultrasound in which a single transducer scans a
line through the body with the echoes plotted on screen as a function of
depth. This method is used to measure distances within the body and the size
of internal organs. Therapeutic ultrasound aimed at a specific tumor or
calculus is also A-mode, to allow for pinpoint accurate focus of the
destructive wave energy.
- B-mode.
In B-mode ultrasound, a linear array of transducers simultaneously scans a
plane through the body that can be viewed as a two-dimensional image on
screen. Ultrasound probes containing more than 100 transducers in sequence
form the basis for these most commonly used scanners.
- M-Mode.
The M stands for motion. A rapid sequence of B-mode scans whose images follow
each other in sequence on screen enables doctors to see and measure range of
motion, as the organ boundaries that produce reflections move relative to the
probe. M-mode ultrasound has been put to particular use in studying heart
motion.
- Doppler
mode. Doppler ultrasonography includes the capability of
accurately measuring velocities of moving material, such as blood in arteries
and veins. The principle is the same as that used in radar guns that measure
the speed of a car on the highway. Doppler capability is most often combined
with B-mode scanning to produce images of blood vessels from which blood flow
can be directly measured. This technique is used extensively to investigate
valve defects, arteriosclerosis and hypertension,
particularly in the heart, but also in the abdominal aorta and the portal vein
of the liver.
The actual procedure for a patient undergoing an abdominal ultrasound is
relatively simple, regardless of the type of scan or its purpose.
Fasting for at least eight hours prior to the procedure ensures
that the stomach is empty and as small as possible, and that the intestines and
bowels are relatively inactive. Fasting also allows the gall bladder to be seen,
as it contracts after eating and may not be seen if the stomach is full. In some
cases, a full bladder helps to push intestinal folds out of the way so that the
gas they contain does not disrupt the image. The patient's abdomen is then
greased with a special gel that allows the ultrasound probe to glide easily
across the skin while transmitting and receiving ultrasonic pulses.
This
procedure is conducted by a doctor with the assistance of a technologist skilled
in operating the equipment. The probe is moved around the abdomen to obtain
different views of the target areas. The patient will likely be asked to change
positions from side to side and to hold their breath as necessary to obtain the
desired views. Discomfort during the procedure is minimal.
The many types and
uses of ultrasound technology makes it difficult to generalize about the time
and costs involved. Relatively simple imaging--scanning a suspicious abdominal
mass or a suspected abdominal aortic aneurysm--will take about half an hour to
perform and will cost a few hundred dollars or more, depending on the quality of
the equipment, the operator and other factors. More involved techniques such as
multiple M-mode and Doppler-enhanced scans, or cases where the targets not well
defined in advance, generally take more time and are more
expensive.
Regardless of the type of scan used and the potential difficulties
encountered, ultrasound remains faster and less expensive than computed
tomography scans (CT), its primary rival in abdominal imaging.
Furthermore, as abdominal ultrasounds are generally undertaken as "medically
necessary" procedures designed to detect the presence of suspected
abnormalities, they are covered under most types of major medical insurance. As
always, though, the patient would be wise to confirm that their coverage extends
to the specific procedure proposed. For non emergency situations, most
underwriters stipulate prior approval as a condition of coverage.
Specific
conditions for which ultrasound may be selected as a treatment option--certain
types of tumors, lesions, kidney stones and other calculi,
muscle and ligament injuries, etc.--are described in detail under the
appropriate entries in this encyclopedia.
Preparation
A
patient undergoing abdominal ultrasound will be advised by their physician about
what to expect and how to prepare. As mentioned above, preparations generally
include fasting and arriving for the procedure with a full bladder, if
necessary. This preparation is particularly useful if the gallbladder, ovaries
or veins are to be examined.
Aftercare
In general, no
aftercare related to the abdominal ultrasound procedure itself is
required.
Risks
Abdominal ultrasound carries with it no
recognized risks or side effects, if properly performed using appropriate
frequency and intensity ranges. Sensitive tissues, particularly those of the
reproductive organs, could possibly sustain damage if violently vibrated by
overly intense ultrasound waves. In general though, such damage would only
result from improper use of the equipment.
Any woman who thinks she might be
pregnant should raise this issue with her doctor before undergoing an abdominal
ultrasound, as a fetus in the early stages of development could be injured by
ultrasound meant to probe deeply recessed abdominal organs.
Normal results
As a diagnostic imaging technique, a normal abdominal
ultrasound is one that indicates the absence of the suspected condition that
prompted the scan. For example, symptoms such as a persistent
cough, labored breathing, and upper abdominal pain suggest the
possibility of, among other things, an abdominal aortic aneurysm. An ultrasound
scan that indicates the absence of an aneurysm would rule out this
life-threatening condition and point to other, less serious
causes.
Abnormal results
Because abdominal ultrasound
imaging is generally undertaken to confirm a suspected condition, the results of
a scan often will prove abnormal--that is they will confirm the diagnosis, be it
kidney stones, cirrhosis of the liver or an aortic aneurysm. At that point,
appropriate medical treatment as prescribed by a patient's doctor is in order.
See the relevant disease and disorder entries in this encyclopedia for more
information.
Key Terms
Accessory
Organ
A lump of tissue adjacent to an organ that is similar to it,
but which serves no important purpose, if functional at all. While not
necessarily harmful, such organs can cause problems if they grow too large or
become cancerous. In any case, their presence points to an underlying
abnormality in the parent organ.
Benign
In medical usage, benign is the opposite of
malignant. It describes an abnormal growth that is stable, treatable and
generally not life-threatening.
Biopsy
The surgical removal and analysis of a tissue
sample for diagnostic purposes. Usually, the term refers to the collection and
analysis of tissue from a suspected tumor to establish malignancy.
Calculus
Any type of hard concretion (stone) in the body,
but usually found in the gallbladder, pancreas and kidneys. They are formed by
the accumulation of excess mineral salts and other organic material such as
blood or mucous. Calculi (pl.) can cause problems by lodging in and obstructing
the proper flow of fluids, such as bile to the intestines or urine to the
bladder.
Cirrhosis
A chronic liver disease characterized by the
invasion of connective tissue and the degeneration of proper
functioning--jaundice is often an accompanying symptom. Causes of cirrhosis
include alcoholism, metabolic diseases, syphilis and congestive heart disease.
Common bile duct
The branching passage through which
bile--a necessary digestive enzyme--travels from the liver and gallbladder into
the small intestine. Digestive enzymes from the pancreas also enter the
intestines through the common bile duct.
Computed tomography scan (CT scan)
A specialized type of
x-ray imaging that uses highly focused and relatively low energy radiation to
produce detailed two-dimensional images of soft tissue structures, particularly
the brain. CT scans are the chief competitor to ultrasound and can yield higher
quality images not disrupted by bone or gas. They are, however, more cumbersome,
time consuming and expensive to perform, and they use ionizing electromagnetic
radiation.
Doppler
The Doppler effect refers to the apparent change
in frequency of sound wave echoes returning to a stationary source from a moving
target. If the object is moving toward the source, the frequency increases; if
the object is moving away, the frequency decreases. The size of this frequency
shift can be used to compute the object's speed--be it a car on the road or
blood in an artery. The Doppler effect holds true for all types of radiation,
not just sound.
Frequency
Sound, whether traveling through air or the
human body, produces vibrations--molecules bouncing into each other--as the
shock wave travels along. The frequency of a sound is the number of vibrations
per second. Within the audible range, frequency means pitch--the higher the
frequency, the higher a sound's pitch.
Ionizing radiation
Radiation that can damage living tissue
by disrupting and destroying individual cells at the molecular level. All types
of nuclear radiation-x rays, gamma rays and beta rays-are potentially ionizing.
Sound waves physically vibrate the material through which they pass, but do not
ionize it.
Jaundice
A condition that results in a yellow tint to the
skin, eyes and body fluids. Bile retention in the liver, gallbladder and
pancreas is the immediate cause, but the underlying cause could be as simple as
obstruction of the common bile duct by a gallstone or as serious as pancreatic
cancer. Ultrasound can distinguish between these conditions.
Malignant
The term literally means growing worse and
resisting treatment. It is used as a synonym for cancerous and connotes a
harmful condition that generally is life-threatening.
Morphology
Literally, the study of form. In medicine,
morphology refers to the size, shape and structure rather than the function of a
given organ. As a diagnostic imaging technique, ultrasound facilitates the
recognition of abnormal morphologies as symptoms of underlying
conditions.
For More Information : Consult
your physician on your next visit.
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