Posterior acoustic shadowing
Acoustic
shadowing • Cholelithiasis - acoustic shadowing - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Schallschatten
bei Cholecystolithiasis mit großem, mutmaßlich verkalktem Konkrement.
editAbdominal
ultrasonography of an 83 year old man who experienced biliary colic two weeks prior.It shows a gallbladder wall that is almost pathologically thickened, at 3 mm. However, there is no apparent edema in the pericholecystic fat. The gallbladder contains biliary sludge, as well as gallstones, which create acoustic shadowing. There is thus gallstones without current cholecystitis. Without annotations Annotated raster (.jpg) Annotated vector (.svg)
Sialolithiasis
• Submandibular sialolithiasis (ultrasound) - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Acoustic
shadowing • Medullary nephrocalcinosis and renal calculi - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Acoustic
shadowing • Foreign body in foot - thorn - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Acoustic
shadowing • Diverticulitis - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Acoustic
shadowing • Gallstone ileus - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Acoustic
shadowing • Bladder calculi - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
The phenomenon of acoustic shadowing (sometimes, somewhat tautologically, called posterior acoustic shadowing) on an ultrasound image is characterized by a signal void behind structures that strongly absorb or reflect ultrasonic waves. It is a form of imaging artifact. This happens most frequently with solid structures, as sound conducts most rapidly in areas where molecules are closely packed, such as in bone or stones.
See also
Siehe auch:
Assoziationen und Differentialdiagnosen zu Schallschatten: