Reference glossary
Ultrasound Glossary
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How this glossary works
Plain-language definitions 📖
Each term is defined in one or two sentences. Acronyms expand on first appearance — ARDMS is the American Registry for Diagnostic Medical Sonography, CAAHEP is the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs. Use the alphabet filter to jump to a letter, or the search to find a term directly.
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Spleen
The spleen is an immune and blood-filtering organ in the left upper abdomen, routinely evaluated by ultrasound for size, texture, and focal lesions.
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Splenic artery
The splenic artery is the tortuous vessel that carries blood from the celiac trunk to the spleen, visible on abdominal ultrasound.
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Splenic vein
The splenic vein carries blood from the spleen to the portal vein, evaluated by ultrasound for thrombosis and dilation.
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Splenomegaly
Enlargement of the spleen beyond its normal size, measured on ultrasound by craniocaudal length.
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Stenosis
Stenosis is the abnormal narrowing of a body passage, frequently evaluated in blood vessels and heart valves by Doppler ultrasound.
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String-of-Pearls Sign
String-of-Pearls Sign: Ultrasound pattern in PCOS of multiple 2–9 mm peripheral follicles arranged around the ovarian stroma, resembling a string of pearls. The string-of-pearls sign is a sonographic pattern in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) where multiple small follicles (2–9 mm) are arranged peripherally in the ovary, resembling a necklace of pearls. It reflects arrested follicular…
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Subclavian artery
The subclavian artery is a major vessel supplying the arm and parts of the brain, assessed by Doppler ultrasound for stenosis and steal syndrome.
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Subclavian vein
The subclavian vein is a major vein beneath the collarbone, evaluated by ultrasound for thrombosis and used as a landmark for central venous access.
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Subcostal View
An ultrasound imaging plane obtained by placing the transducer below the ribcage, used in echocardiography and FAST exams.
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Subdural hematoma
A subdural hematoma is a collection of blood between the brain and its outer covering, sometimes detectable by transcranial ultrasound in infants.
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Superior mesenteric artery
The superior mesenteric artery is a major abdominal vessel supplying most of the small intestine and part of the colon, evaluated by Doppler ultrasound.
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Superior mesenteric vein
The superior mesenteric vein drains blood from the small intestine and colon, joining the splenic vein to form the portal vein.
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Superior vena cava
The superior vena cava is the large vein returning blood from the upper body to the heart, partially visible on echocardiography.
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Synovial fluid
Synovial fluid is the lubricating liquid within joints, visible on ultrasound when increased due to inflammation or injury (joint effusion).
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Tachycardia
Tachycardia is an abnormally fast heart rate, which can be identified and evaluated using echocardiography and fetal ultrasound.
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Tendon
A fibrous connective tissue structure that attaches muscle to bone, appearing as a fibrillar hyperechoic band on ultrasound.
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Tendonitis
Tendonitis is inflammation or degeneration of a tendon, appearing on ultrasound as tendon thickening and loss of normal echogenic texture.
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Teratoma
A teratoma is a tumor containing multiple tissue types such as hair, fat, and teeth, appearing as a complex, echogenic mass on ultrasound.
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Testicular carcinoma
Testicular carcinoma is cancer of the testicle, typically presenting as a solid, hypoechoic intratesticular mass on ultrasound.
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Testicular Torsion
A urologic emergency caused by twisting of the spermatic cord, diagnosed on Doppler ultrasound by absent testicular blood flow.
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Testis
The testis is the male reproductive gland that produces sperm and testosterone, routinely evaluated by scrotal ultrasound.
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Thermal Index
A real-time display on ultrasound machines estimating the potential for tissue heating from the ultrasound beam.
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Thrombosis
Thrombosis is the formation of a blood clot within a blood vessel, detected by ultrasound through non-compressibility and absent Doppler flow.
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Thyroid
The thyroid is a butterfly-shaped gland in the neck that regulates metabolism, commonly evaluated by ultrasound for nodules, size, and texture.
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Thyroid carcinoma
Thyroid carcinoma is cancer of the thyroid gland, characterized on ultrasound by suspicious nodule features like microcalcifications and irregular margins.
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Thyroid nodule
A thyroid nodule is a growth within the thyroid gland, assessed by ultrasound for size, characteristics, and cancer risk using the TI-RADS system.
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Thyroiditis
Thyroiditis is inflammation of the thyroid gland, appearing on ultrasound as a diffusely heterogeneous and hypoechoic thyroid.
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Time Gain Compensation
An amplification adjustment that increases gain for echoes returning from greater depths to compensate for attenuation.
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TIRADS
Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System — a standardized ultrasound classification system for thyroid nodules to guide biopsy decisions.
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TIRADS (Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System)
TIRADS (Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System): ACR standardized classification for thyroid nodule ultrasound features; TR1–TR5 risk categories guide FNA biopsy decisions based on malignancy suspicion. TIRADS is a standardized ultrasound classification system for thyroid nodules that stratifies malignancy risk and guides fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy decisions. The ACR TIRADS assigns points for composition, echogenicity,…
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Tissue harmonic imaging
Tissue harmonic imaging is an ultrasound technique that uses harmonic frequencies generated within the body to produce clearer images with fewer artifacts.
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Transabdominal ultrasound
Transabdominal ultrasound is the standard approach of scanning through the abdominal wall to image internal organs and the developing fetus.
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Transcranial Doppler
Doppler ultrasound of the intracranial arteries performed through the temporal bone window, used to detect stenosis, emboli, and vasospasm.
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Transducer
The handheld probe that transmits and receives ultrasound waves, converting electrical energy to sound and back.
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Transducer
A transducer is the ultrasound probe that sends and receives sound waves. Learn about transducer types, frequencies, and how they work.
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Transesophageal echocardiography
Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is an ultrasound technique where a probe is passed into the esophagus to obtain detailed images of the heart from behind.
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Transvaginal Ultrasound
An ultrasound technique using an endocavitary probe placed in the vagina for high-resolution pelvic imaging.
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Transverse Plane
An imaginary line that divides the body from left to right, creating top and bottom halves. A transverse scan shows a top-down view of the body and is also called an axial scan.
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Transverse Scan
An ultrasound scan taken across the width of a structure, showing how wide it is. Transverse scans show the body from side to side and help you see cross-sections of organs.
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Tricuspid regurgitation
Tricuspid regurgitation is backward leaking of blood through the tricuspid valve, evaluated by Doppler echocardiography.
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Tricuspid valve
The tricuspid valve is the three-leaflet heart valve between the right atrium and right ventricle, assessed on echocardiography.
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Tubo-ovarian abscess
A tubo-ovarian abscess is an infected mass involving the fallopian tube and ovary, appearing as a complex pelvic collection on ultrasound.
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Tumor
A tumor is an abnormal mass of tissue that can be benign or malignant, evaluated by ultrasound for size, characteristics, and blood flow.
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Twinkling Artifact
A rapidly flickering color Doppler signal seen behind strongly reflective surfaces such as kidney stones, improving their detection.
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Ultrasound Contrast Agent
Microbubble-based agents injected intravenously to enhance Doppler and tissue perfusion assessment on ultrasound.
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Umbilical artery
The umbilical arteries are two vessels in the umbilical cord that carry deoxygenated blood from the fetus to the placenta, assessed by Doppler for fetal well-being.
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Umbilical Artery Doppler
Doppler evaluation of blood flow in the umbilical arteries to assess placental resistance and fetal well-being in high-risk pregnancies.
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Umbilical Cord
The connecting structure between fetus and placenta, containing two arteries and one vein — evaluated on obstetric ultrasound.
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Umbilical vein
The umbilical vein is the single vessel in the umbilical cord carrying oxygen-rich blood from the placenta to the fetus.
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Ureter
The ureter is the tube that carries urine from the kidney to the bladder, partially visualizable on ultrasound when dilated.
