Abstract

Dual-beam vector Doppler has the potential to improve peak systolic blood velocity measurement accuracy by automatically correcting for the beam-flow Doppler angle. Using a modified linear-array system with a split receive aperture, we have assessed the angle-dependence over Doppler angles of 40°–70° and the reproducibility of the dual-beam blood maximum velocity estimate measured in the common carotid arteries (CCA) 1 to 2 cm prior to the bifurcation of 9 presumed-healthy volunteers. The velocity magnitude estimate was reduced by approximately 7.9% as the angle between the transmit beam and the vessel axis was increased from 40° to 70°. With repeat measurements made, on average, approximately 6 weeks apart, the 95% velocity magnitude limits of agreement were as follows: Intraobserver −41.3 to +45.2 cm/s; interobserver −29.6 to +46.8 cm/s. There was an 8.6 cm/s interobserver bias in velocity magnitude. We conclude that the dual-beam vector Doppler system can measure blood velocity within its scan plane with low dependence on angle and with similar reproducibility to that of single-beam systems. (E-mail: robins@maths.usyd.edu.au)

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