Doppler Ultrasound

A Doppler ultrasound is a type of ultrasound imaging test that uses sound waves to show how well your blood flows through your blood vessels. It can be used to examine blood flow in many parts of your body, including many of your organs and your neck, arms, and legs.

A Doppler ultrasound can examine your arteries (blood vessels that carry oxygen-rich blood from your heart and lungs to your body) and veins (blood vessels that carry blood from your body back to your heart and lungs to get more oxygen).

Doppler ultrasound works by bouncing sound waves off red blood cells flowing through your blood vessels. The ultrasound device measures the echoes that bounce back from the cells. Cells that are moving away from the sound waves make different echoes than cells that are moving closer to the sound waves. This is called the Doppler effect, named after the scientist who discovered it.

Doppler ultrasound can check for blood vessel conditions that affect the amount, speed, and direction of blood flow in different parts of your body. It can help find narrowed arteries, blood clots, and other conditions.

There are different types of Doppler ultrasound tests that can be used to gather different information. They include: