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The history of the use of ultrasound in medicine has been one of
evolution of technology and innovative methods of applying this
technology to imaging body structures. Many scientists and
clinicians have contributed to this evolution. Ophthalmic
ultrasound has become an indispensible tool in ophthalmic practice,
with its own instrumentation and techniques. Ultrasound frequencies
used in ophthalmology have generally been higher than those used in
general medicine because of a requirement for higher resolution and
a lesser need for deep penetration. Most ophthalmic diagnostic
equipment uses frequencies in the 10 MHz range. The use of
ultrasound frequencies in the 50-100 MHz range is a relatively new
development in ultrasound imaging of the eye. This technique has
been developed in our laboratories over the past several years. We
have progressed from the theoretical description of the basic
science required, past the first in-vitro experiments in eye bank
eyes, to the construction of an instrument capable of clinical
application. We have gained broad clinical experience with this
instrument in normal patients and patients with ocular disease. A
commercial instrument based on our original clinical scanner has
recently become available, allowing other clinicians to apply this
tool to ophthalmic research and clinical practice. We have applied
the term ultrasound biomicroscopy to this new imaging technique
because of similarities to optical biomicroscopy, i. e. , the
observation of living tissue at microscopic resolution.
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