Demonstration of a carotid body tumour by ultrasound

1980 
Carotid body tumours are uncommon and are characteristically situated between the internal and external carotid arteries at the carotid bifurcation. Carotid arteriography is used to show both the splaying of these two vessels and the presence of a typical tumour vascular supply. We describe a noninvasive method utilizing Doppler-shift ultrasound for demonstrating the presence of a carotid body tumour and illustrate this with a case report. The ultrasound system has been described in detail elsewhere (Coghlan and Taylor, 1978; Lewis et al., 1978) and principally consists of a transducer and Doppler-shift velocimeter, a spectral analyser and a continuous-wave imaging system. The transducer is placed on the neck and transmits a narrow beam of ultrasound at a frequency of 5 MHz into the carotid arteries. As the erythrocytes are moving, scattered signals are altered in frequency due to the Doppler effect. Erythrocyte velocities vary across the lumen and therefore a spectrum of Doppler-shift frequencies is back...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    4
    References
    15
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []