Do you know your “ultrasound Fauna”? Can you relate the following animal to a specific ultrasound finding?
Case stories that stick
Are you wondering what's so different about performing and interpreting ultrasound exams on our youngest patients?
This time, we will talk about the second most important setting when imaging your patients - gain and time gain compensation.
In the short axis view of the biceps tendon on the level of the intertubercular groove you can see that the biceps tendon is not in the middle of the groove.
The structure you see is a large aneurysm of the right coronary artery. Atherosclerosis accounts for most aneurysms in adults.
Here is the answer to our second "Beat the Heat" Challenge.