How to see polycystic on ultrasound chart

  Polycystic means that there are many cysts, but there are many reasons for the formation of polycystic, and as ultrasound can only detect morphologically, there are many anechoic parts of the tissue organ parenchyma examined, but it is not possible to diagnose polycystic directly. Usually, the ultrasound report will indicate multiple cysts in the tissues and organs, and then those ultrasound reports that have been clinically diagnosed as polycystic will only show polycystic directly.  The description section of the ultrasound report will show multiple echogenic cysts of varying sizes within the parenchyma of the organ, the larger ones or how large one of them is. The more common clinical diagnoses are polycystic liver, polycystic kidney, polycystic spleen, polycystic pancreas, and polycystic ovaries. Most polycystic disorders have a family history of inheritance. However, polycystic ovaries are different from other polycystic manifestations. On ultrasound, polycystic ovaries may appear as a slightly smaller than normal uterus with a relatively thin endometrium and increased ovarian volume bilaterally. However, as ultrasound can only suggest morphologic changes of ovarian polycystic, and there are many patients with polycystic ovaries in clinical practice, some of whom do not have very typical ultrasound sonographic changes. To diagnose polycystic ovaries, it is still necessary to combine clinical symptoms and endocrine tests.  If it is polycystic it will be described on the ultrasound report as multiple anechoic.