Topic 1 - safety and intro Flashcards

1
Q

What information do you think should be given to pregnant women before undergoing an obstetric ultrasound?

A
  • that the purpose of the test is the detection of fetal abnormalities
  • the diagnostic capacity of the test
  • the limitations of the test (not all congenital malformations can be detected; genetic abnormalities can only be suspected in a certain percentage of patients and the diagnosis of those always requires invasive testing)
  • the concentration required to perform a detailed ultrasound examination
  • if an abnormality is detected, further (invasive) investigations are often recommended and difficult decisions may need to be made
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2
Q

What possible problems can you see when patients are largely unaware of the purpose of their scan?

A

o The patient‟s priority may be to have a nice picture or videotape of the baby or to find out what the gender is. Patients can become very disappointed when these expectations are not fulfilled.
o The patient may expect to chat with the sonographer during the entire ultrasound examination, asking questions, making remarks. Patients can become offended when asked to be quiet during the examination.
o The patient may assume that the ultrasound examination offers the guarantee that the baby is normal.
o The patient may not be aware that sometimes further invasive testing may be required, and may have declined the examination had she known that in advance.
o The patient is completely unprepared for the necessary further investigations and difficult decision making when an abnormality is diagnosed.

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3
Q

What are the most important things you can do to help when an abnormality is diagnosed?

A
  • Usually refer to sonologist
  • if you deliver news only say things you are certain of
  • if you are uncertain say so
  • rapidly refer
  • for miscarriage refer immediately to referrer or emergency department
  • for serious abnormality involve a genetic counsellor
  • for treatable abnormalities refer to a paediatric surgeon (this helps alleviate anxiety)
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4
Q

What can you do to help during follow up of an abnormality?

A
  • All health professionals should be informed about the situation. It is unacceptable to ask the patient why she is having another ultrasound or what they found previously.
  • Always look at the ultrasound report of the previous scans. Information needs to be accessible and up-to-date.
  • Understand practical difficulties (travel, childcare, expense, etc.).
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5
Q

What is the mechanical index?

A

relative potential for ultrasound to induce an adverse bioeffect by a nonthermal mechanism (cavitation)

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6
Q

What is the thermal index?

A

indicator of the relative potential for a tissue temperature rise

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7
Q

What threshold should the MI and TI be kept under?

A

1

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8
Q

What are some ways of keeping the MI and TI under threshold?

A
  • Start the scan at low power output and increase power only if necessary (ALARA)
  • It is preferable to use gain compensation over increasing output power.
  • Be very cautious when using Doppler in the first trimester or in the immediate vicinity of bone.
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9
Q

What are the three important parameters under end-user control?

A

o scanning/operating mode (including transducer choice)
o system setup and output control
o dwell time.

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10
Q

Why is choice of scanning mode important?

A
  • spatial peak temporal average intensity (ISPTA) increases from B-mode (average, 34 mW/cm2) to M-mode to color Doppler to spectral Doppler (average, 1180 mW/cm2)
  • 1 /cm2 in Doppler mode but can reach 10 W/cm2
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11
Q

Why does colour Doppler have higher intensities than b-mode?

A
  • Color Doppler has higher intensities than B-mode - much lower than spectral
  • Due to of mode of operation: sequences of pulses, scanned through the area of interest (“box”).
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12
Q

Why does pulsed Doppler have higher intensity than b and colour mode?

A
  • High pulse repetition frequencies are used in pulsed Doppler techniques means greater temporal average intensities and thus greater heating potential.
    • beam needs to be held in relatively constant position over the vessel of interest in spectral Doppler ultrasound, temporal average intensity may further increase.
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13
Q

Why is transducer choice important in regards to ultrasound safety?

A
  • transducer choice is important because it will determine frequency, penetration, resolution, and field of view.
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14
Q

What are the controls that regulate output?

A

focal depth, usually with greatest power at deeper focus
- occasionally with highest power in the near field
- increasing frame rate
- limiting the field of view, as by high-resolution magnification or certain zooms.
- In Doppler mode
changing sample volume
velocity range (to optimize received signals) will change output

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15
Q

What is dwell time?

A

Dwell time is the actual scanning time

  • The examiner is in control of this
  • Not taken into account in the calculation of the safety indices
  • generally is not reported in clinical or experimental studies.
  • It is directly correlated to examiner experience
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16
Q

What is a bio-effect?

A

Bio-effect = a known effect of the interaction of ultrasound radiation and human tissue.

17
Q

What is a bio-hazard?

A

Bio-hazard = a known damaging consequence of a bio-effect, associated with some risk.

18
Q

What are the three thermal indices?

A

TIS - soft tissue index; only soft tissue is in the beam
TIB - bone index; bone in the focal zone
TIC - cranial bone index; scanning through superficial bone.

19
Q

What does a TI of one mean?

A

A temperature rise of 1 degree Celsius

20
Q

What rise in temp is thought to be safe?

A

<2

21
Q

What rise in temp is thought to be significant?

A

> 2.5

22
Q

Why does worst case heating occur later in pregnancy?

A

maximal ultrasound-induced temperature increase occurs in the fetal brain near bone, worst-case heating will occur later in pregnancy, when the ultrasound beam impinges on bone

23
Q

Which thermal indices are used in different stages of pregnancy?

A

thermal index for bone (TIB) late in pregnancy and thermal index for soft tissue (TIS) earlier.

24
Q

When is the fetus most susceptible to thermal effects?

A

Early first trimester

25
Q

What may be some hazards of thermal effects early in the first trimester?

A
  • central nervous system (CNS) is most at risk
  • neural tube (anencephaly, microencephaly) and the eyes (microphthalmia, cataract)
  • Associated with CNS defects are functional and behavioral problems
  • Other organ defects secondary to hyperthermia include:
    o defects of craniofacial development (e.g., clefts)
    o anomalies of the axial and appendicular skeleton
    o the body wall
    o teeth
    o heart
26
Q

Why might the fetus be at higher risk early in the first trimester?

A

minimal fetal perfusion may reduce heat dispersion

27
Q

If the MI is less than 1….

A

cavitation effects are thought to be minimal

28
Q

Why is it assumed that the risk from mechanical effect secondary to cavitation is minimal

A

Because gas bubbles are not present in fetal lung or bowel

29
Q

What is cavitation?

A

formation of gas bubbles from the fluctuations of the ultrasound pressure wave.

30
Q

What is stable cavitation?

A

ultrasound pressure wave interacts with gas bubbles already present and causes them to expand and contract. As they do they grow in size and they can resonate with the pressure wave of a certain frequency once they reach a certain size. These oscillating micro-bubbles can lead to large forces that can damage molecules, and also lead to micro-streaming.

31
Q

What is inertial cavitation?

A

transient cavitation
more serious than stable cavitation
gas bubbles grow rapidly and suddenly implode during a rarefaction cycle of the ultrasound pressure wave.
implosion causes a shock wave that can disrupt and damage molecules and even lead to the formation of highly reactive chemical radicals
Inertial cavitation can also cause haemorrhaging.

32
Q

What is the asum statement on safety for ultrasound?

A

ALARA
• Only perform a scan when medically indicated
• The examination should be undertaken in the minimum time with the lowest possible power consistent with a diagnostically meaningful image
• The sonographer should not rest the transducer on the patient when on, but not actually scanning
• Use the TI and MI (when displayed) as a guide to the dose being delivered (always aim to keep under 1)
• Be particularly careful about dose when using spectral Doppler (power high), and when scanning bone (thermal effects) or tissue containing micro-bubbles (mechanical effects).