Ultrasound does not only show anatomy.
It also shows physics.
In daily practice, artifacts can easily mimic pathology โ
especially in subtle or borderline findings.
Here are real clinical situations where understanding artifacts prevents overdiagnosis.
๐ฉบ Case 1: โWhy Does a Simple Cyst Look Complex After Mammotome?โ
Situation
A patient with prior mammotome procedures presents with a cystic lesion.
The cyst appears irregular and partially echogenic.
What Happens Physically?
- Posterior acoustic enhancement exaggerates internal echoes.
- Debris may create low-level reverberation.
- Gain settings amplify background noise.
The lesion may look โcomplex,โ
but part of that complexity is physics.
Before upgrading a cyst, adjust gain and evaluate posterior enhancement.
๐ง Case 2: โIs That a Membrane โ or Reverberation?โ
Situation
During fetal ultrasound, a thin linear structure appears within fluid.
What Happens Physically?
- Reverberation between fluid interface and probe surface
- Near-field artifact
- Multiple equally spaced echoes
If the line:
- Moves inconsistently
- Appears evenly spaced
- Changes with probe angle
It is likely reverberation.
True membranes persist in multiple planes. Artifacts do not.
๐ซ Case 3: โThe Disappearing Small VSDโ
Situation
A tiny septal defect is seen in one plane but not another.
What Happens Physically?
- Lateral resolution changes with focal depth
- Beam width increases outside focal zone
- Shadowing from adjacent structures may obscure margins
The defect may appear larger, smaller, or even disappear.
Confirm in orthogonal planes before final measurement.
๐ถ Case 4: Borderline Ventriculomegaly
Situation
Atrial measurement fluctuates around 10 mm.
What Happens Physically?
- Slight oblique section
- Axial resolution limitation
- Suboptimal focal alignment
A 0.5 mm difference may not be pathology.
It may be beam physics.
Borderline measurements require optimal focus and strict axial plane.
Key Reflection for Sonographers
Before labeling pathology, ask:
Is this anatomy โ
or is this physics?
Experience teaches structures.
Understanding artifacts teaches restraint.
Sonographerโs Note
In ultrasound, not everything that looks abnormal is disease.
Some findings are real.
Some are technical.
And some are simply physics doing what physics does.
Over the years, Iโve learned that a brief pause can be more powerful than a quick conclusion.
Before labeling a structure as pathology,
I ask myself:
Is this truly anatomy โ
or is it just sound behaving like sound?
Understanding artifacts doesnโt slow us down.
It makes us steadier.
And sometimes, the most important skill in ultrasound
is knowing when not to overreact.
(Yes, even ultrasound can be dramatic sometimes.)