30
Gynaecological Gynaecological Ultrasound Ultrasound Felipe Moretti, MD Griff Jones, MD, FRCS Assistant Professor – UOttawa Maternal Fetal Medicine Division

Gynaecological Ultrasound

  • Upload
    willa

  • View
    45

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Gynaecological Ultrasound. Felipe Moretti, MD Griff Jones, MD, FRCS Assistant Professor – UOttawa Maternal Fetal Medicine Division. Basic physics Gynaecology. Ultrasound used for medical purposes is from one MHz (one million cycles per second) to 20 MHz. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Gynaecological UltrasoundGynaecological Ultrasound

Felipe Moretti, MD

Griff Jones, MD, FRCS

Assistant Professor – UOttawa

Maternal Fetal Medicine Division

Page 2: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Basic physics

Gynaecology

Page 3: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Ultrasound used for medical purposes is from one MHz (one million cycles per second) to 20 MHz.

Page 4: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Higher frequency wave assesses the object more often in any given time period. This

results in more information and allows sharper images

Page 5: Gynaecological Ultrasound

If each wave represents a path, the walker uses the same energy to reach point X. Low frequency waves penetrate

deeper into the tissues than high frequency waves

Page 6: Gynaecological Ultrasound

SummarySummary

Low frequency sound waves can penetrate more deeply but have less definition than high frequency waves

The farther something is away from the probe, the worse the resolution

Page 7: Gynaecological Ultrasound

In OB GYN Ultrasound – – We use low frequency probes for abdominal

scanning– We use high frequency probes for transvaginal

scanning

Page 8: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Gyne UltrasoundGyne Ultrasound

Assess:

Uterine pathologies (ex. Fibroids);Endometrial pathologies (ex.polyps);Ovarian pathologies (cysts)

Page 9: Gynaecological Ultrasound

UterusUterus

Page 10: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Uterine PositionUterine Position

Page 11: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Uterus TransvaginalUterus Transvaginal

Page 12: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Uterine FibroidUterine Fibroid

Page 13: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Uterine EnlargementUterine Enlargement

Page 14: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Difficult FibroidsDifficult Fibroids

Page 15: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Endometrium changesThroughout the cycle

Page 16: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Anteverted uterus with follicular endometrium

Retroverted uterus with secretory endometrium

Page 17: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Abnormal EndometriumAbnormal Endometrium

Page 18: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Cavity EnlargementCavity Enlargement

Page 19: Gynaecological Ultrasound

OvariesOvaries

Page 20: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Trans-abdominal Ovarian ScanTrans-abdominal Ovarian Scan

Page 21: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Transvaginal Ovarian ScanTransvaginal Ovarian Scan

Page 22: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Depth of penetration was not an issue here. But the improved resolution due to the higher frequency of the TV probe shows ovarian substance and allows a

diagnosis of polycystic ovaries

Transabdominal Transvaginal

Page 23: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Normal OvaryNormal Ovary

Page 24: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Ovarian appearance changes throughout the menstrual cycle

Page 25: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Cystic FollicleCystic Follicle

Page 26: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Cyst ComplicationsCyst Complications

Page 27: Gynaecological Ultrasound

resolved 2 weeks laterresolved 2 weeks later

Page 28: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Ovarian MassesOvarian Masses

Page 29: Gynaecological Ultrasound
Page 30: Gynaecological Ultrasound

Thank YouThank You