PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE
The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News
Number 568 December 7, 2001 by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein,
and James Riordon
ULTRASOUND SCANS ARE AUDIBLE TO A FETUS, researchers reported at this
week's meeting of the Acoustical Society of America in Fort Lauderdale,
Florida. Ultrasound by definition is sound that lies beyond the range
of human hearing. So how can a fetus hear an ultrasound scan? As explained
by the researchers (Mostafa Fatemi, Mayo Foundation, Minnesota, fatemi.mostafa@mayo.edu),
traditional imaging systems produce ultrasound as sequences of short-duration,
high-energy bursts, called "pulse trains." When the pulses
enter the body, they tap internal organs at a regular rate. When the
ultrasound points at the head of the fetus, its sensitive hearing structure
gets vibrated at a rate equal to the number of pulses per second. (Typically,
several thousand pulses are transmitted per second in a pulse train,
a rate equal to several thousand Hertz.) The fetus senses these vibrations
as tones, equivalent to the high notes of a piano. The sound can get
loud--about the equivalent of 100-120 decibels of airborne sound, or
the level of sound of an approaching subway train. Rather than being
akin to a sound from the outside world, though, the sensation is more
like what you hear when your finger taps a spot close to an ear-which
is why it's inaudible to others, including the mother. What's more,
the sound is focused on a tiny, square-millimeter spot, and the sound
diminishes rapidly from that spot, so that the fetus could quickly adjust
its position to avoid the loudness. Fatemi stresses that their findings
do not suggest that this sound is harmful to a fetus. These studies
can help explain physicians' observations that a fetus moves vigorously
when ultrasound is directed at its head. They eliminate the notion that
ultrasound is a passive observation technique, but they may also inspire
new ultrasound exams for testing normal fetal function.
(Paper 1pBB6 at meeting; abstract at asa.aip.org/asasearch.html)