US Physics DMS 600: Diagnostic Medical Sonography
Section 1: Advanced Clinical Hemodynamics & Doppler Optimization
1. When evaluating a high-velocity jet with continuous-wave (CW) Doppler, what specific
limitation must the sonographer account for that is not present in pulsed-wave (PW)
Doppler?
A) Severe aliasing at velocities exceeding 2 m/s.
B) Range ambiguity along the entire beam axis.
C) An inability to measure peak systolic velocities accurately.
D) Complete loss of directional flow information.
Elaboration: CW Doppler uses two overlapping continuous beams, meaning it records all
velocities along the entire line of sight (range ambiguity), preventing the sonographer from
pinpointing the exact depth of the maximum velocity.
2. A sonographer is assessing venous flow in the lower extremities. The color Doppler
image displays flashes of color extending into the surrounding tissue only when the
patient moves. Which control adjustment is most appropriate?
A) Increase the color gain.
B) Decrease the pulse repetition frequency (PRF).
C) Increase the wall filter.
D) Decrease the packet size.
Elaboration: Tissue motion creates high-amplitude, low-frequency Doppler shifts known as
clutter or ghosting. Increasing the wall filter (a high-pass filter) eliminates these low-
frequency noise signals while preserving the higher-frequency blood flow signals.
3. If the Doppler angle of insonation is mistakenly estimated at 30 degrees instead of the
true angle of 60 degrees, what happens to the calculated velocity displayed by the
machine?
A) The velocity will be accurately calculated regardless of the angle input.
B) The velocity calculation will be artificially high.
C) The velocity calculation will be artificially low.
D) The system will display complete aliasing.
,Elaboration: The velocity equation divides by the cosine of the angle. $\cos(30^\circ)$ is
~0.87, and $\cos(60^\circ)$ is 0.5. Dividing by a larger number (0.87) yields a smaller,
artificially low calculated velocity.
4. What is the effect of increasing the "Color Priority" (Color Write Priority) setting on the
ultrasound system?
A) It increases the frame rate by decreasing the color box width.
B) It forces the system to display color pixels over grayscale pixels at lower echo
amplitudes.
C) It eliminates aliasing in highly turbulent vessels.
D) It shifts the baseline to favor positive Doppler shifts.
Elaboration: Color priority sets the threshold for whether a pixel displays grayscale tissue or
color flow. A higher priority allows color to overwrite stronger tissue echoes, which is useful
in visualizing flow in highly echogenic vessels.
5. When performing a spectral Doppler trace on a normal internal carotid artery, the
sonographer notes spectral broadening. If the flow is verified to be laminar, what
technical error likely caused this artifact?
A) The wall filter is set too high.
B) The sample volume gate is set too wide.
C) The PRF is set too high.
D) The baseline is set too low.
Elaboration: If the sample gate encompasses the entire vessel width, it samples the fast flow
in the center and the slow flow near the walls simultaneously, artificially creating spectral
broadening (a filled-in window) despite laminar flow.
6. Which physical principle dictates that the velocity of a fluid increases as the cross-
sectional area of a tube decreases, assuming constant volumetric flow?
A) Poiseuille's Law
B) The Continuity Equation
C) Reynolds Number
D) Bernoulli's Principle
, Elaboration: The Continuity Equation ($Q = V \times A$) states that flow volume ($Q$) must
remain constant. Therefore, if area ($A$) decreases at a stenosis, velocity ($V$) must increase
proportionally.
7. A Doppler spectral waveform demonstrates a sharp upstroke, a rapid deceleration, and
a prominent flow reversal in early diastole. This waveform signature is characteristic of:
A) A high-resistance vascular bed.
B) A low-resistance vascular bed.
C) A post-stenotic turbulent jet.
D) A tardus-parvus waveform.
Elaboration: High-resistance beds (like resting skeletal muscle) restrict forward flow during
diastole, causing the forward pressure wave to reflect backward, creating the classic triphasic
waveform with early diastolic reversal.
8. What happens to the Nyquist limit when a sonographer increases the imaging depth of
the pulsed-wave Doppler sample volume?
A) The Nyquist limit increases, reducing the chance of aliasing.
B) The Nyquist limit decreases, increasing the chance of aliasing.
C) The Nyquist limit remains completely unaffected by depth.
D) The Nyquist limit becomes identical to the fundamental frequency.
Elaboration: Increasing depth increases the pulse repetition period (PRP) and decreases the
pulse repetition frequency (PRF). Since the Nyquist limit is $\text{PRF}/2$, a lower PRF results
in a lower Nyquist limit.
9. While using Power Doppler, the sonographer notes excellent sensitivity to flow but a
complete lack of flow direction. Why does Power Doppler lack directional information?
A) It uses a very low transducer frequency.
B) It averages all velocities into a single mean value.
C) It only calculates the amplitude (strength) of the Doppler shift, ignoring phase
information.
D) It relies solely on the continuous wave principle.
Elaboration: Power Doppler maps the concentration of moving red blood cells (amplitude)
rather than their velocity or direction, making it virtually independent of the Doppler angle
and highly sensitive to slow flow.