| Literature DB >> 27064372 |
Michael Yong Park1, Seung Eun Jung1, Joon-Il Choi1, Jae Young Byun1.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess whether slanted gel pads can be used to optimize beam-flow angles and flow velocity measurements for Doppler ultrasound. The right carotid artery of a single healthy female volunteer was measured alternatively five times without and with an 18° angled slanted gel pad between the ultrasound transducer and skin by 13 radiologists. Beam-flow angles and peak systolic flow velocities (PSV) were measured along with assessment of spectral broadening. Beam-flow angles (P = 0.001) and PSV (P = 0.001) measurements showed a significant decrease when using slanted gel pads. The mean (±SD) beam-flow angles without and with the use of slanted gel pads were 66.7 (±4.2) and 56.1 (±5.8) degrees, respectively. The mean (±SD) PSVs without and with the use of slanted gel pads were 92.0 (±17.4) and 76.9 (±10.9) cm/s, respectively. There was a noticeable decrease in spectral broadening when using slanted gel pads. There was a significant linear correlation between beam-flow angle and peak systolic velocity. Coefficients of variation for peak systolic velocity without and with the use of gel pads were 18.9 and 14.2 %, respectively. These results demonstrate that slanted gel pads decrease beam-flow angles and overestimation of Doppler flow velocity measurements while potentially increasing the reliability of measurements.Entities:
Keywords: Angle correction; Beam-flow angle; Peak systolic velocity; Pulsed Doppler ultrasonography; Spectral broadening; Ultrasound
Year: 2016 PMID: 27064372 PMCID: PMC4791444 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-1977-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Diagram shows a commercially available gel pad which was cut diagonally to create an 18° slanted gel pad
Fig. 2Diagram shows measurement of the carotid artery using a slanted gel pad to decrease beam-flow angle. a Diagram shows a slanted gel pad placed between the ultrasound transducer and skin which is decreasing the beam-flow angle. b As the skin and soft tissue is slightly elastic the probe and slanted gel pad can be tilted and compressed against the neck during measurement to further decrease beam-flow angle. This technique was left to the radiologists to perform according to personal preferences
The mean (±SD) of beam-flow angles, PSVs without and with the use of slanted gel pads by radiologist and all radiologists combined. Radiologists 12 and 13 designed this study and were aware of the purpose of the study, the other radiologists were not aware of the purpose of this study
| Radiologist | Mean beam-flow angle without gel pads (°) | Mean beam-flow angle with gel pads (°) | Mean PSV without gel pads (cm/s) | Mean PSV with gel pads (cm/s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 63.6 (±2.6) | 50.4 (±3.0) | 101.8 (±5.6) | 85.5 (±7.0) |
| 2 | 65.6 (±1.7) | 58.8 (±2.3) | 109.3 (±7.2) | 98.6 (±8.1) |
| 3 | 70.0 (±1.4) | 58.8 (±1.8) | 97.7 (±8.6) | 86.0 (±2.5) |
| 4 | 68.0 (±2.4) | 60.8 (±1.1) | 99.9 (±7.7) | 81.1 (±6.0) |
| 5 | 73.6 (±1.2) | 62.8 (±4.0) | 118.4 (±7.6) | 81.1 (±7.9) |
| 6 | 64.4 (±1.7) | 56.0 (±2.8) | 81.1 (±7.1) | 71.5 (±3.4) |
| 7 | 65.6 (±0.9) | 58.0 (±3.7) | 80.6 (±8.8) | 73.0 (±7.1) |
| 8 | 67.2 (±4.1) | 54.4 (±1.7) | 84.8 (±17.1) | 71.9 (±5.2) |
| 9 | 73.2 (±3.0) | 59.6 (±5.0) | 107.0 (±22.8) | 75.2 (±10.2) |
| 10 | 62.8 (±3.0) | 55.2 (±4.4) | 77.0 (±4.4) | 70.3 (±6.1) |
| 11 | 67.6 (±2.6) | 60.4 (±3.9) | 86.9 (±4.5) | 76.0 (±10.3) |
| 12 | 61.2 (±1.8) | 44.0 (±0) | 74.0 (±6.0) | 63.1 (±2.4) |
| 13 | 64.0 (±1.4) | 50.4 (±4.3) | 76.0 (±4.9) | 66.5 (±6.5) |
Total mean (±SD) beam-flow angles: without slanted gel pads: 66.7° (±4.2), with slanted gel pads: 56.1° (±5.8), P value: 0.001; Total mean (±SD) PSVs: without slanted gel pads: 92.0 (±17.4) cm/s, with slanted gel pads: 76.9 (±10.9) cm/s, P value: 0.001
Fig. 3Bar charts with error bars showing the mean beam-flow angles and mean PSVs without and with the use of slanted gel pads by each radiologist. Radiologists 12 and 13 designed this study and were aware of the purpose of the study, the other radiologists were not aware of the purpose of this study. a Side-by-side bar chart showing beam-flow angles of each radiologist without and with gel pads. b Side-by-side bar chart showing the mean PSV of each radiologist without and with gel pads
Fig. 4As Doppler beam-flow angles decreased, decreases in spectral broadening were seen. a Image of Doppler velocity measurement taken at a 64° beam-flow angle without the use of slanted gel pads shows spectral broadening throughout nearly the whole velocity range (arrow). b Image of Doppler velocity measurement taken at a 44° beam-flow angle with the use of a slanted gel pad (star) shows much decreased spectral broadening seen mostly throughout only the upper velocity range (arrow)
Fig. 5Scatter plot with line fit of flow velocity and angle shows a significant linear correlation (P = 0.000, R2 = 0.491) between beam-flow angle and PSV, with PSV overestimation progressively increased as beam-flow angles increased even with Doppler angle correction