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Three‐Dimensional Ultrasound

Three‐Dimensional Ultrasound Two-dimensional viewing of three-dimensional anatomy, using conventional ultrasound, limits clinicians' ability to quantify and visualize a number of diseases. It is one reason for the reported variability in ultrasound diagnosis. Two-dimensional ultrasound has several limitations. The 2-D ultrasound image represents a thin plane at an arbitrary angle in the body; it is difficult to localize the image plane, and reproduce it at a later time. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Ultrasound quarterly Wolters Kluwer Health

Three‐Dimensional Ultrasound

Ultrasound quarterly , Volume 14 (1) – Mar 1, 1998

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ISSN
0894-8771
eISSN
1536-0253

Abstract

Two-dimensional viewing of three-dimensional anatomy, using conventional ultrasound, limits clinicians' ability to quantify and visualize a number of diseases. It is one reason for the reported variability in ultrasound diagnosis. Two-dimensional ultrasound has several limitations. The 2-D ultrasound image represents a thin plane at an arbitrary angle in the body; it is difficult to localize the image plane, and reproduce it at a later time.

Journal

Ultrasound quarterlyWolters Kluwer Health

Published: Mar 1, 1998

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