What does an Ultrasound Machine do?
An ultrasound examination uses high-frequency sound waves to make a picture of a person’s internal body edifices. Doctors usually use ultrasound to study an evolving fetus (unborn baby), a person’s intestinal and lumbar organs, muscles and tendons, or heart and blood vessels. The ultrasound machine supplied by the ultrasound machine dealers guides high-frequency sound waves at the internal body edifices being scrutinized. The reproduced sounds, or reverberations, are logged to generate an image that can be seen on a screen. The sound waves are produced and obtained from a small, hand-held probe. The high incidence of the sound means the human ear cannot hear it – which is why it is named ultrasound. An ultrasound examination is typically non-invasive (completed from outside the body). Though, some examinations are completed with a special probe that is implanted into the person’s vagina (for some obstetric or genital inspections), rectum (for some prostate inspections), or esopha