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100

The term used to describe the effects of an ultrasound wave on living tissues.

Biologic effects

100

With this type of wave, the direction of particle motion is perpendicular to the direction the wave is traveling

transverse

100

The combination of waves when they exist at the same location and time. 

interference

100

2-20 MHz

range of frequencies in diagnostic ultrasound

100

This is the reciprocal of frequency

period

100

The intensity of a signal declines from 1.5mW/cm^2 to 0.75mW/cm^2. How many decibels is this change in intensity?

-3 dB

100

What are the units of pulse duration (PD)?

units of time (sec, years, etc)

100

Electric ____ applied to a transducer are converted to ultrasound.

voltages

100

PACS stands for _______. 

Picture Archiving and Communications System

100

What doppler angle is the most inaccurate?

less than 30 or more than 60 degrees

100

How long does it take for sound to make a round trip to and from the skin’s surface to a reflector depth of 1 cm in soft tissue?

13 us

200

This will happen to the amplitude of wave as it travels through the body

decreases

200

These factors determine the wavelength

sound source and medium 

200

The fraction of time that pulsed ultrasound is on is called ______.

Duty Factor (DF)

200

These determine the intensity of a sound beam after it has traveled through the body

sound source and medium

200

If traveling through the same medium, which would have a longer wavelength, a 20 kHz pulse or a 15 MHz pulse?

20 kHz

200

How many decibels represents a 100 fold increase in the intensity of an acoustic pulse? 

20

200

The pulse repetition frequency is the...

... reciprocal of pulse repetition period

200

Panoramic imaging expands the image ___

Beyond the normal limits of a transducer's field or view.

200

Which of the following frequencies is operated by the thinnest element?

10.0 MHz

200

What can pulsed doppler differentiate that continuous wave cannot?

location

200

The shorter pulse duration, the better the image. True or False?

True

300

If traveling through the same medium, which would have the lowest propagation speed, 2 MHz pulse or 10 MHz pulse?

neither, they're the same

300

Which of the following operator controls adjusts compression?

Dynamic Range

300

The useful frequency range for the most diagnostic applications is _______ MHz.

2-20

300

This term describes a doubling it's original value for the amplitude of an acoustic wave

3 dB

300

Which of the following pulsed-wave techniques demonstrates the lowest sonographic output?

gray-scale

300

A sound beam travels 9 cm in soft tissue. The attenuation coefficient is 3 dB/cm. What is the total attenuation the sound beam experienced? 

27 dB

300

What intensity is closely related to tissue heating?

SPTA

300

What is attached to the rear face of the transducer element?

Damping

300

Ultrasound transducers operate according to ________.

The Piezoelectric Principle

300

What is the meaning of a thermal index =3

tissue temperature may rise 3C

300

Axial resolution describes the accuracy related to visualizing two structures that are ____ to a sound beams main axis.

Parallel

400

Which of the following has the same meaning as transducer diameter?

Aperture

400

Optison and Imagent are names of ultrasound ______.

Contrast Agents

400

Partial-volume artifact is also called _______.

Section thickness artifact

400

The fraction of time that pulsed ultrasound is on is called

Duty Factor (DF)

400

Which of the frequencies is operated by the thinnest element.

10.0 MHz

400

Which two properties help establish the acoustic impedance of a medium?

Density and stiffness 

400

A relationship between two numbers

What is a decibel? 

400

Which operator control adjusts compression?

Dynamic range

400

Which artifact displaces structures axially?

Speed Error

400

A doppler exam is performed with a 5 MHz probe and a PRF of 15 kHz. What doppler shift will create aliasing?

Any frequency OVER 7.5 kHz (1/2 the PRF)

400

In soft tissue, sound travels to a reflector and back to the transducer in 39us. How deep is the reflector?

3 cm

500

Retention of previous frames while new echo information is added in the same scanning plane is called ________.

Interpolation

500

The width of the sample volume is determined by the _____.

Beam width and sample volume depth

500

Almost al ultrasound contrast agents contain _________.

Gas Microbubbles

500

If the echo returns 104 us after a pulse wave was emitted by a transducer, at what depth is the structure that produced the echo located?

8.0 cm

500

The useful range for most diagnostic applications is?

2-20 MHz

500

What is the maximum permissible value for both the intensity reflection coefficient and the intensity transmission coefficient? 

1

500

What happens to the PRF when a sonographer increases the maximum imaging depth? 

decreases

500

What can the sonographer do to improve clutter?

reposition the transducer 

500

Which of the following is achieved within the Fresnel zone?

Focusing on the sound beam

500

An ultrasound system is set at 0 dB and is transmitting at full intensity. What is the output power when the system is transmitting at 50% full intensity?

-3 dB

500

An ultrasound pulse has a PRP of 1.2 msec, a spatial pulse length of 2 mm, and a wavelength of 0.4 mm. what is the axial resolution of the system?

1.0 cm