|
|
|
| HISTORICAL
INFORMATION ~ Scenes from the History of
Ultrasound ~ Page 3 |
|
|
1st Contact B-Scanner (1956) |
P3-SL10 |
|
 |
 |
The first contact B scanner
was designed and built by Tom Brown on the
frame of a hospital bed-table. It is seen here with its first picture; this
shows
echoes from the skin, at the top of the picture, and from the bowel. |
|
|
|
Compound Sector Scanning |
P3-SL11 |
|
 |
 |
The bed table
scanner, seen here in the Western Infirmary, Glasgow
was manually operated. A compound sector technique was used to
build up a two-dimensional image with grey scaling. |
|
|
|
Automatic Scanner (1959) |
P3-SL12 |
|
 |
 |
Tom Brown developed the
worlds first and only fully automatic scanner in
order to give a consistent scanning pattern. Much of the early research was
carried out with this machine. |
|
|
|
The Early Experiments |
P3-SL13 |
|
| The early experiments led to the publication of
Donald, MacVicar and Browns first paper on diagnostic ultrasound in
The Lancet (1958). |
 |
| John MacVicar, Donalds registrar (background),
and Ian Donald using the automatic scanner in the Western
Infirmary, Glasgow, c 1959. |
 |
|
|
|
Serendipity |
P3-SL14 |
|
 |
The discovery that a full bladder gave a sonic
window into the uterus was accidental. One of Donalds patients with
a full bladder was scanned. A gestation sac was seen and ultrasound became a
valuable tool in obstetrics as well as gynaecology. This picture shows twin
gestation sacs (s) under the large dark area of the bladder (B). |
|
|
|
|
 |
PREVIOUS
(PAGE 2) |
|
 |
BACK TO
HISTORY HOME |
|
| NEXT (PAGE
4) |
 |
|
|
|