Ultrasound: When It’s Truly Needed and When It’s Not
The doctor says “get an ultrasound” — and the patient books it without fully understanding what they’re looking for or why ultrasound specifically. Then there’s the opposite: abdominal pain for a month, but the person only reaches the ultrasound room when the pain becomes unbearable. Both extremes are a problem. Let’s break down when ultrasound genuinely helps and when another method is better.
How Ultrasound Works
A transducer emits sound waves at 2–18 MHz. The waves pass through tissues, bounce off density boundaries, and return. The machine processes these echoes in real time to build an image. No radiation, no pain, no limits on frequency — ultrasound can be repeated as often as needed.
What Ultrasound Sees Well
Abdominal organs (liver, gallbladder, pancreas, kidneys) — size, structure, stones, cysts, tumors. Thyroid — nodules, inflammation, size changes. Pelvic organs — uterus, ovaries, prostate. Heart (echocardiography) — valves, chamber sizes, contractility. Blood vessels (Doppler) — flow speed, wall condition, useful for diagnosing varicose veins, thrombosis, and carotid atherosclerosis.
Where Ultrasound Has Limitations
Ultrasound doesn’t penetrate bone or air well. The adult brain, lungs, and intestines are generally not ultrasound territory — MRI, CT, or endoscopy are needed instead. Obesity also reduces image quality as sound waves attenuate in fatty tissue.
When Ultrasound Is Urgent
Acute abdominal pain, suspected ectopic pregnancy, jaundice, abdominal trauma, sudden lymph node enlargement — in all these situations, ultrasound provides answers in minutes.
How to Prepare
Abdominal ultrasound requires fasting for 6–8 hours. Bladder ultrasound requires drinking water beforehand. Most other examinations need no preparation. Detailed tips are in our article How to Prepare for Medical Examinations. The ultrasound room at S-Clinic uses modern high-resolution equipment. Book an appointment online or by phone.
Author
С-Клінік
Medical center editorial team