Results 201 to 210 of about 952,652 (238)
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Warts and Ultrasound

Archives of Dermatology, 1969
A preliminary report on the treatment of plantar warts with ultrasound was made in 1958. The present study offers confirmation of this initial study by quoting a series of 1,000 patients. In view of the additional experience and knowledge gained, a revised technique and dosage is given for improving wart treatment.
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Interpretation of Ultrasound

Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America, 2010
This content is designed to acquaint the clinician with some of the more common ultrasonographic manifestations of clinical conditions that the otolaryngologist is likely to encounter in a general practice. The clinician requires a thorough knowledge of head and neck anatomy to best interpret the variations from normal structures demonstrated on ...
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Musculoskeletal Ultrasound

BMUS Bulletin, 1996
Ultrasound is an extremely useful and versatile method of assessing soft tissue abnormality in rheumatological conditions. It is best performed as an extension of clinical examination. Ultrasound has the advantage of not only being able to demonstrate abnormalities but also allows transducer compression of those abnormalities to see if it reproduces ...
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ULTRASOUND OF THE NECK

Radiologic Clinics of North America, 2000
Sonography, when performed by an experienced examiner, can be used for evaluation of many pathologies in the head and neck area. Some benign neck lesions, such as cysts, lipomas, carotid body tumors, and hyperplastic lymph nodes, have typical sonomorphology.
Dietmar Koischwitz, Norbert Gritzmann
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Surgeon-performed ultrasound: endorectal ultrasound

Surgical Clinics of North America, 2004
Endorectal (ERUS) and endoanal (EAUS) ultrasound imaging is increasingly being performed by surgeons in the office and outpatient setting for the assessment of both benign and malignant disease. Multiple studies have demonstrated the accuracy of these modalities in identifying pertinent anatomy and anatomic abnormalities.
David M. Schaffzin, W.Douglas Wong
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Ultrasound imaging

Journal of Biomedical Engineering, 1988
Modern ultrasonic transducers mainly employ lead zirconate titanate (PZT) but vinylidene fluoride trifluoroethylene copolymer (P (VDF-TrPE)) is becoming more competitive. The static scanner is now largely replaced by mechanical or electronically controlled array real time systems; the speed of scanning is limited by the speed of sound and the ...
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Ultrasound in Neurology

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1955
The ultrasonic focused beam method of producing selective, precisely localized, quantitatively reproducible lesions in the brains of experimental animals is illustrated. The acoustic calibration procedure, the surgical preparation of the animal, and the technique of irradiation are demonstrated in this motion picture. The complete instrumentation setup
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Muscle ultrasound

2016
Muscle ultrasound is an ideal imaging modality that allows for noninvasive, radiation-free point-of-care neuromuscular imaging. There are many potential applications of muscle ultrasound, including identification of abnormal muscle movements such as fasciculations, evaluation of muscle trauma, identification of physiologic parameters such as pennation ...
Pillen, S., Boon, A., Alfen, N. van
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Interventional gastroenterology in oncology

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2023
Vaibhav Wadhwa
exaly  

Endobronchial Ultrasound: The Basics of Ultrasound

2017
Medical ultrasound imaging consists of using high-pitched sound bouncing off tissues to generate images of internal body structures. The ultrasound waves are created from mechanical or electronical oscillations of crystals in a so-called transducer, which are excited by electrical pulses (piezoelectric effect).
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