Reference glossary

Ultrasound Glossary

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  • Mitral stenosis

    Mitral stenosis is a narrowing of the mitral valve that restricts blood flow from the left atrium to the left ventricle, evaluated by echocardiography.

  • Modality

    A modality refers to a particular imaging technique or method, such as ultrasound, CT, or MRI.

  • Moiré artifact

    A moiré artifact is a wavy or linear striping pattern that can appear on ultrasound when the transducer is held at certain angles.

  • Molar pregnancy

    A molar pregnancy is an abnormal pregnancy caused by a genetic error during fertilization, appearing on ultrasound as a characteristic heterogeneous mass with small cysts.

  • Monoamniotic pregnancy

    A monoamniotic pregnancy occurs when twins share both a placenta and an amniotic sac, the highest-risk type of multiple gestation.

  • Monochorionic pregnancy

    A monochorionic pregnancy is one in which twins share a single placenta but may have separate or shared amniotic sacs.

  • Motion artifact

    Motion artifact occurs when patient movement or breathing disrupts the ultrasound image, making it blurry or distorted.

  • Mucinous adenocarcinoma

    Mucinous adenocarcinoma is a type of cancer that produces mucin, often occurring in the gastrointestinal tract, detectable on ultrasound as a mass.

  • Multicystic dysplastic kidney

    A multicystic dysplastic kidney is an abnormal kidney consisting of non-communicating cysts, typically non-functional and not requiring treatment.

  • Multinodular goiter

    A multinodular goiter is an enlarged thyroid gland containing multiple nodules, commonly evaluated with ultrasound.

  • Multiple gestations

    Multiple gestations refer to pregnancies with more than one fetus, requiring careful ultrasound assessment to determine chorionicity and amnionicity.

  • Murphy Sign

    Sonographic Murphy sign — focal tenderness directly over the gallbladder during ultrasound examination, indicating acute cholecystitis.

  • Muscle

    Muscle tissue, visible on ultrasound as hypoechoic linear bundles, is a fundamental structure of the musculoskeletal system.

  • Musculoskeletal Ultrasound

    Ultrasound imaging of tendons, muscles, ligaments, nerves, and joints for diagnosis of soft tissue injuries and guidance of injections.

  • Myasthenia gravis

    Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune neuromuscular disease that can be associated with thymic abnormalities visible on ultrasound.

  • Mycotic aneurysm

    A mycotic aneurysm is an infected aneurysm, typically resulting from bacterial seeding during bacteremia or endocarditis.

  • Myelencephalocele

    A myelencephalocele is a severe form of neural tube defect in which brain tissue herniates through an opening in the skull.

  • Myelomeningocele

    A myelomeningocele is a neural tube defect in which the spinal cord and meninges herniate through an opening in the vertebral column.

  • Myoma

    A myoma is a benign smooth muscle tumor, most commonly found in the uterus where it is called a fibroid or leiomyoma.

  • Myopia

    Myopia, or nearsightedness, causes high optical power in the eye, which can lead to unusual findings when eyes are scanned with ultrasound.

  • Myxedema

    Myxedema is severe hypothyroidism characterized by accumulation of mucopolysaccharides in the skin and soft tissues.

  • Myxoma

    A myxoma is a cardiac tumor, most commonly arising from the left atrium, visible on echocardiography.

  • Nasal bone

    The nasal bones are small bones in the nose that can be measured on prenatal ultrasound as a marker for chromosomal abnormalities.

  • Near Field

    The region immediately adjacent to the transducer face where the ultrasound beam is relatively uniform before spreading.

  • Neovascularization

    Neovascularization is the formation of new blood vessels, which can be detected on color Doppler ultrasound as a sign of inflammation or malignancy.

  • Nephroblastoma

    A nephroblastoma is a malignant kidney tumor in children, also known as Wilms tumor, visible as a renal mass on ultrasound.

  • Nephrolithiasis

    Nephrolithiasis is the medical term for kidney stone disease, with stone appearance and location best shown on ultrasound.

  • Nephroptosis

    Nephroptosis is abnormal mobility or descent of the kidney, potentially visible on ultrasound when the patient changes position.

  • Nephrotic syndrome

    Nephrotic syndrome is characterized by severe proteinuria and reduced serum proteins, with ultrasound used to evaluate kidney size and echogenicity.

  • Nerve

    Nerves are bundles of nerve fibers visible on high-resolution ultrasound, particularly during musculoskeletal and peripheral nerve examination.

  • Nerve Entrapment

    Compression of a peripheral nerve within an anatomic tunnel, evaluated on ultrasound by increased nerve cross-sectional area.

  • Neural tube defect

    Neural tube defects are congenital malformations of the brain or spinal cord resulting from failure of the neural tube to close during fetal development.

  • Neuroblastoma

    A neuroblastoma is a malignant tumor of neural crest origin, most commonly arising in the adrenal gland, visible as a renal or suprarenal mass on ultrasound.

  • Neurofibromatosis

    Neurofibromatosis is a genetic disorder characterized by the development of neurofibromas (tumors of nerve tissue), visible as soft tissue masses on ultrasound.

  • Neuroma

    A neuroma is a benign tumor of nerve tissue that can occur in various locations, including common sites like the interdigital space of the foot.

  • Newborn screening

    Newborn screening refers to the use of ultrasound in newborn infants to detect congenital abnormalities and disease.

  • Nodal metastasis

    Nodal metastasis refers to cancer spread to lymph nodes, visible on ultrasound as enlarged or abnormal-appearing lymph nodes.

  • Nodule

    A nodule is a small, discrete lesion or abnormality, typically less than 10 millimeters in diameter, visible on ultrasound.

  • Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

    Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is the accumulation of excess fat in the liver in patients without significant alcohol consumption.

  • Nonechogenic

    Nonechogenic is a term describing structures that do not produce ultrasound echoes, appearing completely dark on ultrasound images.

  • Nonimmune hydrops fetalis

    Nonimmune hydrops fetalis is severe fluid accumulation in the fetus not caused by Rh incompatibility, detectable on prenatal ultrasound.

  • Nuchal cord

    Nuchal cord occurs when the umbilical cord wraps around the fetal neck, readily detected on prenatal ultrasound.

  • Nuchal fold

    The nuchal fold is a measurement of skin thickening at the back of the fetal neck, used as a prenatal screening marker for chromosomal abnormalities.

  • Nuchal Translucency

    A sonographic measurement of fluid at the back of the fetal neck at 11–14 weeks, used to screen for chromosomal abnormalities.

  • Nucleation

    Nucleation is the process by which gallstones or kidney stones begin to form, with factors affecting nucleation studied in stone disease research.

  • Obstetric Ultrasound

    Ultrasound imaging of the pregnant uterus to evaluate fetal development, anatomy, growth, and well-being.

  • Ovarian Follicle

    A fluid-filled sac within the ovary containing an oocyte, visualized on ultrasound during ovulation monitoring.

  • Ovarian Torsion

    Twisting of the ovary on its pedicle causing ischemia — a gynecologic emergency evaluated with Doppler ultrasound.

  • Pancreatic Duct Dilation

    Enlargement of the main pancreatic duct on ultrasound, normally less than 3 mm — a key finding in pancreatitis and pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.

  • Parasternal Long Axis View

    A standard echocardiographic view showing the left ventricle, mitral valve, aortic valve, and aortic root in a long-axis plane.