Reference glossary
Ultrasound Glossary
No terms match.
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.
-
Cholestasis
A condition in which the flow of bile from the liver is slowed or blocked, which may cause bile duct dilation visible on ultrasound.
-
Chordae tendineae
Thin, cord-like structures that connect the heart valve leaflets to the papillary muscles, preventing the valves from turning inside out during contraction.
-
Cirrhosis
End-stage liver fibrosis characterized on ultrasound by a coarsened echotexture, nodular surface, and signs of portal hypertension.
-
Clinical Rotation
A clinical rotation is hands-on training where students perform real ultrasound exams under supervision. Learn about clinical rotations in sonography programs.
-
Cogwheel Sign
Cogwheel Sign: Cross-sectional ultrasound appearance of an inflamed fallopian tube with echogenic mucosal folds projecting inward, characteristic of pyosalpinx in PID. The cogwheel sign is a sonographic finding seen in pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) on transvaginal ultrasound in which the inflamed fallopian tube appears as a circular structure with internal echogenic projections (incomplete septa or…
-
Color Flow Doppler
A Doppler mode that overlays color-coded blood flow direction and velocity onto a 2D B-Mode image in real time.
-
Color Flow Mapping
An ultrasound technique that displays blood flow as colors on top of a grayscale image. Red typically means blood flowing toward the transducer and blue means blood flowing away.
-
Continuous Wave Doppler
A Doppler mode using two crystals to continuously transmit and receive, capable of measuring very high blood flow velocities without aliasing.
-
Coronal Plane
An imaginary line that divides the body from top to bottom, creating front and back halves. A coronal scan shows a front view of the body.
-
Corpus Luteum
A temporary endocrine structure formed in the ovary after ovulation, appearing on ultrasound as a thick-walled cystic structure with peripheral vascularity.
-
Crown-Rump Length
The measurement from the top of the fetal head to the bottom of the torso, used to date a pregnancy in the first trimester.
-
Curvilinear Array Transducer
A transducer with a curved face that produces a fan-shaped image, used for abdominal and obstetric imaging.
-
Dandy-Walker malformation
A congenital brain abnormality involving the cerebellum and the fourth ventricle, detectable on prenatal and neonatal ultrasound.
-
Dead zone
The area immediately beneath the ultrasound transducer where structures cannot be clearly imaged due to the initial pulse of sound.
-
Decibel
A unit of measurement used to describe the relative loudness or intensity of sound waves, including the ultrasound signals used in diagnostic imaging.
-
Deep Vein Thrombosis
A blood clot in a deep vein, most commonly in the leg — diagnosed with compression ultrasound.
-
Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT)
Deep vein thrombosis is a blood clot in a deep leg vein. Learn about DVT risk factors, symptoms, and ultrasound diagnosis.
-
Deformity
An abnormal shape or structure of a body part that can be congenital or acquired, sometimes assessable with ultrasound imaging.
-
Degenerative disc disease
A condition in which spinal discs gradually break down with age, potentially causing pain and nerve compression, sometimes evaluated with ultrasound.
-
Degenerative joint disease
The gradual wearing down of joint cartilage, also known as osteoarthritis, which can be assessed with musculoskeletal ultrasound.
-
Delayed gastric emptying
A condition in which the stomach takes too long to move food into the small intestine, which can be assessed with real-time ultrasound.
-
Delta wave
An abnormal electrical signal in the heart caused by an extra conduction pathway, which can affect Doppler flow patterns seen during echocardiography.
-
Dermoid cyst
A type of ovarian tumor that can contain hair, teeth, skin, and other tissues, with a characteristic appearance on ultrasound.
-
Diabetes mellitus
A chronic metabolic disease affecting blood sugar regulation that has many complications detectable and monitorable with ultrasound.
-
Diabetic nephropathy
Kidney damage caused by long-term diabetes that can be monitored with renal ultrasound.
-
Diaphragm
The dome-shaped muscle separating the chest from the abdomen that is the primary muscle of breathing, visible on ultrasound as a bright, curved line.
-
Diaphragmatic hernia
A condition in which abdominal organs push through a hole in the diaphragm into the chest cavity, detectable on prenatal ultrasound.
-
Diastole
The phase of the cardiac cycle when the heart muscle relaxes and the chambers fill with blood.
-
Diastolic dysfunction
A condition in which the heart’s lower chambers cannot relax and fill with blood normally, diagnosed primarily through echocardiography.
-
Diastolic flow
Blood flow that occurs during the relaxation phase of the cardiac cycle, whose presence and pattern provide important diagnostic information on Doppler ultrasound.
-
Diastolic pressure
The lower number in a blood pressure reading, representing the pressure in the arteries when the heart is relaxing between beats.
-
Diffuse liver disease
A broad term for conditions affecting the entire liver, including fatty liver, hepatitis, and cirrhosis, which alter the liver’s ultrasound appearance.
-
Diffuse parenchymal disease
Disease affecting the functional tissue of an entire organ, causing widespread changes visible on ultrasound.
-
Digital subtraction angiography
An X-ray-based imaging technique that creates detailed pictures of blood vessels by subtracting background bone and tissue, used as a reference standard for vascular ultrasound.
-
Dilatation
The widening or stretching of a hollow organ or tubular structure beyond its normal size, a common finding reported in many ultrasound examinations.
-
Dilated cardiomyopathy
A heart muscle disease in which the heart chambers enlarge and the pumping function weakens, diagnosed primarily through echocardiography.
-
Diverticulitis
Inflammation or infection of small pouches in the colon wall, which can sometimes be diagnosed with ultrasound as an alternative to CT scanning.
-
Diverticulosis
A condition in which small pouches form in the walls of the colon, present in many adults over age 50, sometimes visible on abdominal ultrasound.
-
Diverticulum
A small pouch or sac that protrudes outward from the wall of a hollow organ, most commonly the colon or bladder.
-
Doppler (Doppler Ultrasound)
Doppler is an ultrasound technique that measures blood flow and velocity. Learn how Doppler works, its types, and clinical applications.
-
Doppler Angle
The angle between the ultrasound beam and the direction of blood flow, which must be 60° or less for accurate velocity measurements.
-
Doppler effect
The change in frequency of sound waves when there is relative motion between the sound source and the listener, which is the fundamental principle behind Doppler ultrasound.
-
Doppler shift
The difference between the transmitted and received ultrasound frequency caused by blood cell movement, used to calculate flow velocity.
-
Doppler Ultrasound
An ultrasound technique that detects the movement of blood or tissue by measuring frequency shifts in reflected sound waves.
-
Doppler Waveform Analysis
Systematic evaluation of the shape, velocity, and pulsatility of spectral Doppler waveforms to characterize normal and abnormal flow patterns.
-
Double bubble sign
A prenatal ultrasound finding showing two fluid-filled areas in the fetal abdomen, indicating a blockage in the upper small intestine.
-
Double decidual sign
An early pregnancy ultrasound finding that helps confirm the gestational sac is located inside the uterus rather than being an ectopic pregnancy.
-
Down syndrome
A genetic condition caused by an extra copy of chromosome 21, which can be screened for with prenatal ultrasound markers.
-
Ductus arteriosus
A fetal blood vessel connecting the pulmonary artery to the aorta that normally closes shortly after birth.
-
Ductus venosus
A fetal blood vessel that shunts oxygen-rich blood from the umbilical vein directly to the heart, evaluated during first trimester screening.
