Resolution problems in echocardiology: a source of interpretation errors.

Resolution is the ability of the echocardiographic system to distinguish closely lying structures. This is usually defined in two directions: laterally (lateral resolution) and in depth (axial resolution). With use of short ultrasonic pulses, axial resolution is not a major problem. By far the more important problem is the limited lateral resolution that results from the finite beam width of current ultrasonic devices. This results in the display of echoes that originate from off-axis structures. How these off-axis or "spurious echoes" affect the display is a function of the way the echographic information is handled. In conventional M-mode tracings, spurious echoes are displayed at a site where there is no directly corresponding anatomic structure, whereas with two-dimensional imaging, these echoes may result in important distortions of structures. The underlying principles are illustrated by a clinical experiment wherein the ball of a Starr-Edwards mitral valve prosthesis serves as a target of known shape and dimensions. These data are used to elucidate some of the problems and potential errors encountered in the interpretation of clinical M-mode recordings of the aorta, mitral valve and the left ventricular endocardium as well as their cross-sectional analysis. They also explain the present limitations of quantification of left ventricular performance from cross-sectional images.

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