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Multiple Choice Question-and-Answer Book for Echocardiographers of All Levels-3rd Edition Updated to Include 100 New Questions
Echocardiography Board Review, Third Edition is written in a unique question-and-answer format. Each question contains four potential answers related to the field of echocardiography - only one of which is correct. The discussion following each question contains specific rationale explaining the correct answer, along with additional information pertaining to the topic so that key concepts are clearly understood by the reader.
The questions address many areas of echocardiography, including applied ultrasound physics, practical hydrodynamics, imaging techniques, valvular heart disease, myocardial diseases, congenital heart disease, noninvasive hemodynamics, surgical echocardiography, and more. Rather than being a replacement for a standard echocardiography textbook, Echocardiography Board Review is designed to complement the textbook by bringing out salient concepts in a clear fashion. Features of the work include:
Echocardiography Board Review, Third Edition is a helpful resource for those involved in the field of echocardiography who wish to become better practitioners through an active form of learning. Additionally, the work serves as a useful complementary asset in preparing for various certifying examinations related to the field of echocardiography.
RAMDAS G. PAI is Professor of Medicine, Chairman of Medicine and Clinical Sciences, and Program Director for the Cardiology Fellowship Training Program at The University of California, Riverside, School of Medicine. He is an invited speaker in the field of echocardiography internationally. He has published 400 abstracts and articles in the field of cardiology and echocardiography.
PADMINI VARADARAJAN is Professor of Medicine, Chief of Cardiology, and Associate Program Director for the Cardiology Fellowship Training Program at The University of California, Riverside, School of Medicine. She is also an advanced academic echocardiographer with expertise in both echocardiography and cardiac MRI. She is an active researcher, clinician, and teacher who has presented at multiple national meetings.
Preface ix
Chapter 1 1
Questions 1-20 1
Answers 1-20 4
Chapter 2 7
Questions 1-20 7
Answers 1-20 10
Chapter 3 13
Questions 1-20 13
Answers 1-20 16
Chapter 4 19
Questions 1-20 19
Answers 1-20 23
Chapter 5 27
Questions 1-20 27
Answers 1-20 30
Chapter 6 33
Questions 1-20 33
Answers 1-20 37
Chapter 7 41
Questions 1-20 41
Answers 1-20 44
Chapter 8 47
Questions 1-20 47
Answers 1-20 50
Chapter 9 53
Questions 1-20 53
Answers 1-20 56
Chapter 10 59
Questions 1-20 59
Answers 1-20 62
Chapter 11 65
Questions 1-20 65
Answers 1-20 68
Chapter 12 71
Questions 1-20 71
Answers 1-20 80
Chapter 13 83
Questions 1-20 83
Answers 1-20 93
Chapter 14 97
Questions 1-20 97
Answers 1-20 108
Chapter 15 111
Questions 1-20 111
Answers 1-20 122
Chapter 16 125
Questions 1-20 125
Answers 1-20 136
Chapter 17 141
Questions 1-20 141
Answers 1-20 152
Chapter 18 155
Questions 1-20 155
Answers 1-20 166
Chapter 19 171
Questions 1-20 171
Answers 1-20 183
Chapter 20 187
Questions 1-20 187
Answers 1-20 198
Chapter 21 203
Questions 1-20 203
Answers 1-20 212
Chapter 22 217
Questions 1-20 217
Answers 1-20 228
Chapter 23 231
Questions 1-20 231
Answers 1-20 241
Chapter 24 243
Questions 1-20 243
Answers 1-20 254
Chapter 25 257
Questions 1-20 257
Answers 1-20 268
Chapter 26 271
Questions 1-30 271
Answers 1-30 284
Chapter 27 293
Questions 1-34 293
Answers 1-34 303
Speed of sound in tissue is 1540?m/s. Hence, travel time to a depth of 15?cm is roughly 0.1?ms one way (1540?m/s = 154?000?cm/s or 154?cm/ms or 15?cm per 0.1?ms) or 0.2?ms for to-and-fro travel. This is independent of transducer frequency and depends only on the medium of transmission.
Wavelength depends on frequency and propagation speed. It is given by the following relationship: wavelength (mm) = propagation speed (mm/µs)/frequency (MHZ). Hence, propagation speed = frequency?×?wavelength.
Reducing the sector angle will reduce the time required to complete a frame by reducing the number of scan lines. This increases the temporal resolution. Decreasing the depth will increase the frame rate as well by reducing the transit time for ultrasound. Adding color Doppler will reduce the frame rate as more data need to be processed.
Period is the time taken for one cycle or one wavelength to occur. The common unit for period is µs. Period decreases as frequency increases. The relationship is given by the equation: period = 1/frequency. For a 5 MHZ ultrasound the period is 0.2?µs (1s/5 million cycles/s = 0.2 µs).
The law of conservation of mass is the basis of the continuity equation. As the flow rate at the PISA surface and the regurgitant orifice is the same, dividing the flow rate (cm3/s) by the velocity (cm/s) at the regurgitant orifice obtained by continuous wave Doppler gives the effective regurgitant area in cm2 (regurgitant flow rate in cm3/s divided by flow velocity in cm/s equals effective regurgitant area in cm2).
In a nonobstructed mitral valve flow velocities are low. Significant energy is expended in accelerating the flow (flow acceleration). As the flow velocity is low, energy associated with convective acceleration is low. As viscous losses in this situation are minimal, the other two components (flow acceleration and convective acceleration) of the Bernoulli equation have to be taken into account. In the simplified Bernoulli equation, the flow acceleration component is ignored. Put simply, when you deal with low-velocity signals in a pulsatile system, the simplified Bernoulli equation does not describe the pressure flow relationship accurately.
Lateral resolution depends on beam width, which increases at increasing depths. Axial resolution depends on spatial pulse length, which is a function of transducer frequency, pulse duration, and propagation velocity in the medium.
Depth of focus equals squared crystal diameter divided by wavelength multiplied by 4. In this situation, (20?mm)2/(2.5?mm?×?4) = 400/10 = 40?mm.
Lateral resolution diminishes at increasing depths owing to beam divergence. Frame rate determines the temporal resolution as temporal resolution is the reciprocal of frame rate. For example, frame rate of 50 fps gives a temporal resolution of 1/50 = 0.02?s or 20?m. Wavelength is a function of the transducer frequency and is independent of depth and frame rate adjustments.
Amplitude or strength of the reflected beam, and its temporal registration, which determines depth registration.
Pulse duration is the characteristic of the pulse and does not change with depth. An increase in depth will increase the pulse repetition period, and hence reduce frequency and the duty factor.
Backscatter or diffuse reflection produces most of the clinical images. Specular reflection reaches the transducer only when the incident angle is 90° to the surface, which is not the case in most of the images produced. Refracted and transmitted ultrasounds do not come back to the transducer.
Attenuation is the loss of ultrasound energy as it travels through the tissue and is caused by absorption and random scatter. It is greater with longer travel path length as it has to go through more tissue. Attenuation is greater at higher frequencies due to shorter wavelength. Attenuation is greatest for air followed by bone, soft tissue, and water or blood.
It is a measure of attenuation and reflects the depth at which the ultrasound energy is reduced by half. It is given by the formula: 6?cm/frequency in MHz. For example, for an ultrasound frequency of 3?MHz the half-intensity depth is 2?cm, and for 6?MHz it is 1?cm.
The PRF is independent of transducer frequency and only determined by time of flight, which is the total time taken by ultrasound in the body in both directions. Ultrasound can travel 154?000?cm in a second at a travel speed of...
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