Doppler Effect
How is the velocity of blood flow determined when using Doppler?
Modulation
How is the Doppler signal affected by hematocrit?
Higher hematocrit produces more particles available to reflect back the ultrasound, producing a stronger return signal
Doppler Equation
Frequency change = v x cos angle x 2f/c
v = blood velocity angle = angle of incidence of beam with blood flow f = transmitted frequency c = speed of sound in blood (1540 m/s)
** only blood velocity and angle are non-constants **
Beam angle and Doppler
Doppler equation relies on cos angle
Cos 1 = 1 ; cos 90 = 0
** at angle of incidence greater than 30 the value of cos rapidly decreases to zero and makes it difficult for Doppler to appreciate movement of blood **
** to simplify mathematics and strengthen the Doppler signal, most machines default to cos 0 (=1) and thus ignore this part of the equation **
Isolating the Doppler frequency shift
Steps:
Ways to display Doppler data
2. Spectral
Audible broadcast of Doppler data
Spectral display of Doppler data
= presenting Doppler data as time-velocity plot
VTI
Velocity time integral
= area under the velocity-time plot for a single cardiac cycle
Markers of a high quality Doppler signal (spectral display)
Pulsed wave Doppler
Sample volume (PW)
Time gating
Aka pulsed wave Doppler
Time delay equation (pulsed wave Doppler)
Time delay = (2 x distance)/speed
Speed = 1540 constant
Pulse length
= wavelength x # cycles contained in each sound pulse
Pulse wave Doppler trade off
Pulse repetition frequency (PRF)
Limitations of pulsed wave Doppler
1/2 PRF = nyquist limit
Nyquist Limit
= 1/2 pulse repetition frequency
Maximizing Pulsed wave Doppler
High-frequency pulsed Doppler
Continuous Wave Doppler