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Comparison of conventional and transverse Doppler sonograms
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1993
Year
AeroacousticsTransverse Doppler SonogramsMedical UltrasoundEngineeringMeasurementThoracic UltrasoundEducationUnsteady FlowConventional Oblique ProbingDoppler Spectrum BandwidthInstrumentationBlood Flow MeasurementRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingMedical ImagingUltrasonicsUltrasoundDigital Subtraction AngiographyRadarAerospace EngineeringFlow MeasurementConventional Doppler Technique
When measuring flow velocity using the conventional ultrasonic Doppler effect, beam axis-to-flow angles approaching 90 degrees are avoided as the Doppler spectrum frequency shift is known to go to zero at this angle. In this paper, the conventional Doppler technique is compared with the transverse Doppler method, in which the Doppler spectrum bandwidth is used to estimate flow, allowing flow to be probed at 90 degrees. The comparison is made using a moving thread flow phantom capable of executing various velocity profiles. This technique may allow the probing of vessels that are inaccessible to conventional oblique probing, thus complementing the conventional Doppler technique.