Monday, February 9, 2026

Chapter 8:

How Thermal Imaging Reveals Hidden Pathology in Pain, Neuropathy, and Vascular Disease

A Clinical Walkthrough with Dr. Phil Hoekstra, MS, CCE, CEP


In clinical medicine, the feet are often overlooked until pain, ulcers, neuropathy, or tissue breakdown force urgent attention. Yet the feet are among the most information-dense regions of the body, reflecting vascular health, nerve integrity, inflammatory patterns, and autonomic regulation. In a guided tour of real patient scans, clinical thermologist Dr. Phil Hoekstra demonstrates how infrared thermal imaging transforms the feet into diagnostic maps—revealing pathology long before structural damage becomes obvious on conventional imaging.

 

Thermal imaging (also called medical thermology) visualizes skin surface temperature as a proxy for underlying physiology. Because blood flow, inflammation, and autonomic nerve activity regulate heat, temperature patterns become functional biomarkers of disease. Dr. Hoekstra’s walkthrough shows how thermography helps clinicians objectively assess conditions such as Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type II (CRPS II), diabetic microangiopathy, peripheral neuropathy, post-injury autonomic dysfunction, and early pressure-related tissue injury.

 


Thermal Symmetry as a Baseline of Health

One of the foundational principles Dr. Hoekstra emphasizes is bilateral symmetry. In healthy physiology, the left and right feet should present nearly identical thermal profiles. When asymmetry appears—one foot markedly cooler or warmer than the other—it signals dysregulation. In diabetic microangiopathy, for example, thermography often shows a sharp temperature demarcation at the transition from the tarsal region to the toes, reflecting impaired microcirculation to distal tissues. This thermal “cutoff” pattern visually captures what patients experience as cold, numb digits and delayed healing.

 

Thermography also reveals what a normal foot should look like: evenly distributed warmth with slightly warmer nail beds due to dense capillary networks. Deviations from this profile—cool distal digits, patchy hotspots, or abrupt gradients—become clinical clues that something is wrong with perfusion or autonomic control.

 

CRPS II: Making the Invisible Visible

CRPS II is among the most devastating and diagnostically challenging pain disorders. Patients experience severe, disproportionate pain with autonomic instability that alters blood flow and skin temperature. Dr. Hoekstra notes that thermography is uniquely sensitive to this condition, often outperforming electromyography in specificity. Early in CRPS II, the affected limb may appear abnormally warm due to autonomic overdrive; later, it may swing to extreme cold as dysregulation persists.

 

What elevates thermography from static imaging to functional testing is the autonomic challenge. By alternating thermal stimuli—such as immersing hands in cool and warm water—clinicians can observe reflexive temperature modulation in unaffected limbs, while the diseased limb fails to regulate. This lack of modulation is objective evidence of autonomic dysfunction, turning subjective pain into quantifiable physiology. In one patient described by Dr. Hoekstra, this testing confirmed CRPS II following a seemingly minor sports injury, ultimately guiding aggressive neurological intervention.

 

Neuropathy and Dermatomal Mapping

Peripheral neuropathy and radiculopathy often produce burning, tingling, or electric pain in specific distributions. Thermography can visualize these patterns along dermatomes—the “wiring diagram” of the skin mapped to spinal nerve roots. Dr. Hoekstra describes how thermal gradients trace neuropathic pathways, helping localize nerve impingement in the spine or peripheral nerves in the limbs. When combined with autonomic challenge testing, clinicians can differentiate acute inflammatory phases (often warmer) from chronic ischemic or denervated phases (often cooler).

 

This capability is especially valuable in pain management and personal injury contexts, where objective documentation of nerve-related dysfunction supports diagnosis, treatment planning, and medico-legal clarity.

 

 

PART 2:

THERMOLOGY AND THE DIAGNOSTIC VALUE OF ACTIVE SURVEILLANCE FOR EXTREMITY DISORDERS

By: Robert L. Bard & Phil Hoekstra, PhD

 

This chapter established the feet as powerful diagnostic territories—where thermal patterns reveal autonomic dysfunction, neuropathic pain, and vascular compromise long before structural damage becomes obvious. Part 2 advances this conversation from visual insight to
measurable intelligence, showing how modern thermography transforms color gradients into quantifiable data that can guide clinical decisions over time. Through Dr. Phil Hoekstra’s clinical walkthrough, thermal imaging emerges not merely as a snapshot, but as a tool for active surveillance—capable of tracking disease progression, treatment response, and emerging tissue risk across oncology survivorship, diabetic foot care, neuropathy, and wound prevention. This section explores how temperature curves, distal thermal drop-offs, and autonomic challenge testing provide objective markers of microcirculatory health and nerve regulation. Positioned alongside conventional imaging and neurologic testing, thermography adds a functional dimension to extremity care—offering clinicians a proactive, non-invasive way to monitor recovery, anticipate complications, and intervene earlier in the disease process.

 

Quantifying Disease: From Images to Data

Beyond visual interpretation, modern thermography provides quantitative analytics. Dr. Hoekstra demonstrates how clinicians plot temperature values between two points along the limb, generating curves that reveal abrupt distal drops consistent with neuropathy or microangiopathy. These thermal gradients are not merely descriptive; they are measurable indicators of disease progression or recovery over time. In active surveillance, repeated scans allow clinicians to monitor whether perfusion improves with treatment, whether autonomic regulation normalizes, or whether pathology advances toward tissue compromise.

 

 Cancer Treatment, Microcirculation, and the Feet

Although cancer does not commonly originate in the feet, oncologic treatments profoundly affect peripheral tissues. Chemotherapeutic agents damage microvasculature and peripheral nerves, contributing to hand-foot syndrome, neuropathy, edema, and skin breakdown. Radiation disrupts autonomic regulation, often creating persistent thermal artifacts in treated regions. Dr. Hoekstra notes that thermography can objectively capture these changes, making it a useful tool for survivorship care—especially in patients with lingering neuropathy, compromised circulation, or delayed wound healing in the lower extremities.

 

Non-Contact Imaging for Wounds and Diabetic Foot

For diabetic foot disease, ulcers, and gangrenous changes, thermography offers a crucial advantage: no contact. Unlike ultrasound gel or manual palpation, infrared imaging does not touch compromised skin. Clinicians can screen for developing hotspots around wounds (suggesting inflammation or infection) or cold zones indicating ischemia. This makes thermography especially valuable for high-risk patients with fragile tissue integrity.

 

Preventing Pressure Injuries Before They Break the Skin

One of the most compelling preventive applications highlighted by Dr. Hoekstra is early detection of pressure-related tissue injury in bedridden or institutionalized patients. Before a bedsore becomes visible, thermography can reveal subtle thermal changes signaling ischemia and tissue stress. Proactive interventions—repositioning, offloading, and targeted care—can then prevent skin breakdown. In an era where pressure injuries carry immense clinical and legal consequences, thermal screening becomes both a patient-safety measure and a quality-of-care standard.

 

Thermography as a Complement, Not a Replacement

Dr. Hoekstra is careful to frame thermography as a complementary modality. It does not replace ultrasound, MRI, nerve conduction studies, or laboratory testing. Instead, it adds a functional layer—revealing how physiology behaves in real time. In extremity care, this functional insight bridges gaps between structure and symptoms, making thermography particularly valuable in chronic pain, neuropathy, diabetic foot management, and post-treatment surveillance.

 

A Diagnostic Future Written in Heat

Through Dr. Hoekstra’s clinical walkthrough, the feet emerge as “informative”—rich with physiological signals that thermal imaging can decode. From CRPS II and neuropathic pain to diabetic microangiopathy, cancer treatment sequelae, and early pressure injury, thermography transforms subtle thermal cues into actionable clinical intelligence. As healthcare moves toward earlier detection and functional diagnostics, thermal imaging of the extremities stands as a powerful, non-invasive ally—one that turns color gradients into clarity, and heat patterns into insight.




 

 THE SOURCE: PODIATRYSCAN 2.0


THERMAL IMAGING (MEDICAL THERMOLOGY)
offers a non-invasive, functional window into vascular, neurologic, and inflammatory processes that are often invisible to structural imaging. In this clinical walkthrough, Dr. Phil Hoekstra guides readers through real-world thermal scans of the feet, demonstrating how temperature patterns reveal microangiopathy in diabetes, autonomic dysfunction in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type II (CRPS II), dermatomal patterns of neuropathy, and perfusion abnormalities following injury or cancer treatment. By combining static imaging with autonomic challenge testing, thermography provides objective evidence of dysregulated blood flow and nerve-mediated temperature control. The feet emerge as highly informative diagnostic territories, reflecting systemic disease, peripheral nerve injury, and early tissue compromise before visible breakdown occurs. This article positions thermography as a complementary tool for active surveillance in podiatry, pain management, neurology, oncology survivorship, and wound prevention—expanding functional diagnostics for earlier detection, monitoring, and preventive intervention in extremity care.


Sunday, February 8, 2026

Cancer Treatment, Microcirculation, and the Feet

Why the feet serve as a diagnostic sentinel in oncology therapies 


Modern cancer therapies have transformed survival outcomes, yet survivorship often carries a hidden burden: long-term compromise of peripheral circulation, nerve integrity, and tissue resilience—most visibly expressed in the feet. Chemotherapy disrupts microvascular networks and damages peripheral nerves; radiation alters vascular regulation and autonomic signaling; and targeted and immunotherapies introduce new patterns of inflammatory and ischemic stress. These physiologic disruptions commonly manifest in the lower extremities as numbness, burning pain, edema, color changes, delayed wound healing, nail pathology, and skin breakdown—symptoms that erode mobility, independence, and quality of life.

PodiatryScan reframes the feet as a sentinel region for treatment-related injury—where early shifts in perfusion, nerve function, and tissue tolerance can be detected, monitored, and managed longitudinally. Rather than waiting for survivorship complications to escalate into disability, a proactive surveillance model identifies emerging microcirculatory compromise and neuropathic stress earlier in recovery. Positioned within oncology survivorship care, PodiatryScan supports preventive foot monitoring, rehabilitation planning, protective strategies, and timely referral—elevating post-cancer care from reactive management to function-preserving, anticipatory medicine.


1) Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy (CIPN) and the Feet

CIPN is among the most prevalent and functionally limiting toxicities of cancer therapy. Agents such as taxanes, platinum compounds, vinca alkaloids, and proteasome inhibitors damage sensory axons and small fibers that innervate the feet, producing numbness, paresthesia, burning pain, and proprioceptive loss. The feet—being distal—are affected earliest and often most severely. Sensory loss increases fall risk, impairs balance, and predisposes to unnoticed trauma. Persistent neuropathy can outlast treatment by years, reshaping gait mechanics and loading patterns across the foot and ankle. Surveillance that tracks sensory thresholds, skin integrity, and functional stability helps clinicians intervene with protective footwear, balance training, and timely referrals to neurology or rehab before secondary injuries accrue.

 

2) Microvascular Injury and Ischemic Stress

Many cytotoxic agents injure endothelial cells and disrupt nitric-oxide–mediated vasodilation, diminishing capillary perfusion in distal tissues. Reduced microcirculation compromises oxygen delivery to the toes and plantar skin, delaying healing after minor cuts or pressure points. In patients with pre-existing vascular disease, diabetes, or smoking history, treatment-related microangiopathy compounds ischemic risk. The feet, as terminal vascular territories, often reveal early signs of perfusion stress—color changes, temperature asymmetry, and delayed capillary refill—making them an ideal surveillance target for circulatory compromise during survivorship.

 

3) Radiation Effects on Vascular Regulation and Autonomic Control

Radiation therapy can induce long-lasting endothelial injury, fibrosis, and autonomic dysregulation within treated fields and along neurovascular pathways. Although the feet are rarely irradiated directly, autonomic disturbances and systemic inflammatory responses can alter distal vascular tone and sweat gland function. Patients may report cold intolerance, color changes, edema, or brittle skin and nails in the lower extremities. These changes increase susceptibility to fissures, infection, and pressure injury—particularly in older adults or those with limited mobility. Monitoring distal tissue resilience becomes part of comprehensive survivorship care.

 

4) Hand–Foot Syndrome (Palmar-Plantar Erythrodysesthesia)

Certain chemotherapies and targeted agents precipitate hand–foot syndrome, characterized by erythema, pain, swelling, desquamation, and blistering on palms and soles. Plantar involvement threatens ambulation and adherence to therapy. Early identification of plantar skin stress enables dose adjustments, topical protection, and offloading strategies that preserve function and reduce treatment interruptions.

 

5) Lymphedema, Edema, and Tissue Vulnerability

Cancer-related lymphatic injury—whether from surgery, radiation, or systemic inflammation—can manifest as lower-extremity edema. Chronic swelling increases skin tension, reduces microcirculatory exchange, and raises infection risk. The feet, constrained by footwear and dependent positioning, are particularly vulnerable to maceration and fissuring. Longitudinal surveillance guides compression strategies, footwear modification, skin care, and referral to lymphedema therapy to prevent recurrent cellulitis and mobility decline.

 

6) Immunotherapy and Inflammatory Dermatoses

Checkpoint inhibitors and other immunotherapies introduce novel inflammatory toxicities affecting skin and small vessels. Acral dermatitis, vasculitic changes, and microvascular inflammation may present on the feet as painful erythema, purpura, or ulceration. Differentiating immune-mediated dermatoses from ischemic or infectious etiologies is critical to avoid mismanagement and unnecessary treatment interruptions. Structured foot surveillance supports earlier triage and targeted management.

 

7) Nail and Skin Barrier Disruption

Onycholysis, brittle nails, paronychia, xerosis, and fissuring are common during systemic therapy. On the feet, nail dystrophy alters pressure distribution in footwear, while skin barrier breakdown invites fungal and bacterial infection. Preventive foot care—routine inspection, nail management, moisturization, and footwear assessment—reduces secondary complications that disproportionately burden survivors with neuropathy or edema.

8) Musculoskeletal Deconditioning and Gait Changes

Pain, fatigue, and neuropathy alter loading patterns across the forefoot and heel, precipitating callus formation, plantar fasciopathy, and stress reactions. Deconditioning compounds these biomechanical shifts, increasing fall risk. Integrating podiatric assessment with rehabilitation planning preserves mobility and helps survivors return to activity safely.

 

9) Infection Risk in an Immunocompromised Host

Neutropenia and mucocutaneous barrier injury elevate the risk of tinea pedis, cellulitis, and wound infection in the feet. Minor interdigital fissures can escalate rapidly in immunocompromised patients. Proactive surveillance, patient education on daily foot checks, and rapid response pathways for early infection signs are essential.

 


10) Why the Feet Are a Sentinel in Survivorship

The feet concentrate the downstream effects of vascular, neurologic, inflammatory, and mechanical stressors introduced by cancer therapies. Because they are distal, load-bearing, and richly innervated, early dysfunction becomes clinically apparent there first. PodiatryScan operationalizes this insight through structured, longitudinal foot monitoring—integrating perfusion cues, sensory status, skin integrity, and functional mobility into survivorship workflows. The result is earlier detection, smarter referrals, targeted protection, and function-preserving care that keeps survivors mobile and independent.


Clinical Takeaways (PodiatryScan Edition)

·   Screen early and often for sensory loss, perfusion stress, and skin barrier compromise in the feet during and after therapy.

·   Act preventively with footwear optimization, offloading, skin care, balance training, and timely specialty referral.

·   Coordinate care across oncology, podiatry, neurology, rehab, and wound services to prevent small problems from becoming disabling sequelae.


References  

  1. American Cancer Society. (2023). Hand–foot syndrome (palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia).
  2. Argyriou, A. A., Bruna, J., Marmiroli, P., & Cavaletti, G. (2012). Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neurotoxicity (CIPN): An update. Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology, 82(1), 51–77.
  3. Cavaletti, G., & Marmiroli, P. (2010). Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neurotoxicity. Nature Reviews Neurology, 6(12), 657–666.
  4. Hershman, D. L., et al. (2014). Prevention and management of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy in survivors of adult cancers. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 32(18), 1941–1967.
  5. Lacouture, M. E., et al. (2011). Clinical practice guidelines for the prevention and treatment of EGFR inhibitor–associated dermatologic toxicities. Supportive Care in Cancer, 19(8), 1079–1095.
  6. National Cancer Institute. (2024). Peripheral neuropathy (PDQ®)–Health professional version.
  7. Rockson, S. G. (2018). Lymphedema. American Journal of Medicine, 131(3), 276–280.
  8. Siegel, R. L., Miller, K. D., & Jemal, A. (2024). Cancer statistics. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 74(1), 17–48.
  9. Smith, E. M. L., et al. (2013). The reliability and validity of a modified Total Neuropathy Score in patients with CIPN. Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System, 18(1), 45–51.
  10. Sonis, S. T. (2013). Pathobiology of mucositis. Nature Reviews Cancer, 4(4), 277–284.

 

Monday, February 2, 2026

ADVANCED 3D ULTRASOUND IMAGING OF THE RETINA

 

Using high-resolution 3D ultrasound scanning, Dr. Robert L. Bard is able to visualize and analyze the structural integrity of the retina beyond conventional two-dimensional assessment. In this examination, volumetric ultrasound data capture allows for layered visualization of retinal tissues, enabling identification of subtle textural variations, depth irregularities, and acoustic shadowing patterns that are not readily appreciable on standard planar imaging.

As demonstrated in the image, the lower portion of the ultrasound display reveals heterogeneous echogenic textures and shadowing artifacts consistent with pathological retinal changes. These findings reflect alterations in tissue density and reflectivity, which may correspond to inflammatory, degenerative, vascular, or space-occupying retinal processes. By interrogating the retina in three dimensions, Dr. Bard can assess contour distortion, abnormal interfaces, and posterior acoustic behavior—critical indicators of disease presence and progression.

The ability to identify and localize pathology within the retinal architecture using 3D ultrasound provides a powerful, non-invasive adjunct to traditional ophthalmic diagnostics, particularly in cases where optical clarity is compromised or where deeper structural insight is required. This approach supports earlier detection, improved characterization of retinal disease, and more informed clinical decision-making.

For more information, visit: BARDDIAGNOSTICS.com 



Reframing Legacy for Image-Guided Research and Quantitative Validation

This reframing of legacy ophthalmic knowledge is driven by a clear purpose: to restore measurement, visualization, and verification to the center of modern clinical research. As medicine moves toward increasingly complex therapies and personalized interventions, the need for image-guided research and quantitative treatment validation has never been greater. Revisiting foundational imaging principles is not an academic exercise—it is a necessary recalibration of how evidence is established.

The original pioneers of ophthalmic ultrasonography understood something that remains profoundly relevant today: imaging is not merely diagnostic; it is confirmatory. When applied longitudinally, imaging becomes a tool for tracking biological response, distinguishing correlation from causation, and validating whether an intervention is truly altering tissue behavior. This philosophy now finds renewed relevance in the work of Dr. Robert Bard, whose research has consistently emphasized image-guided verification in complex exposure-related conditions.

Dr. Bard’s investigations into mercury toxic exposures and hypersensitivity syndromes, as well as the emerging association between mercury burden and age-related macular degeneration (AMD), underscore the limits of symptom-based and laboratory-only assessment. Heavy metal toxicity often presents with diffuse, fluctuating, and poorly localized symptoms. Imaging offers a critical missing dimension—revealing tissue-level changes, vascular responses, and inflammatory patterns that can be monitored over time.  By integrating legacy imaging principles with contemporary research questions, this work advocates for a model of care where treatments are not simply administered, but validated. Image-guided research transforms hypothesis into observable evidence and elevates patient care from assumption to accountability. In doing so, it bridges past wisdom with future medicine—where seeing change is the standard by which progress is judged.

 

2026 Upgrade


RETINALSCAN 2.0: Quantitative Imaging for Early Detection of Systemic Disease
reframes the eye as a measurable gateway to whole-body health. Building on the foundational principles introduced in the classic Real-Time Ophthalmic Ultrasonography (1978), this modern work revisits legacy ultrasound thinking through the lens of today’s image-guided medicine, 3D retinal imaging, and quantitative validation.

Drawing on decades of diagnostic imaging experience, Dr. Robert L. Bard presents the retina not merely as an organ of vision, but as a living diagnostic interface reflecting neurological, vascular, inflammatory, and exposure-related pathology. Where conventional care often relies on symptoms or delayed laboratory findings, RETINALSCAN 2.0 advances a model of early detection grounded in real-time visualization, layered tissue assessment, and measurable change over time.

This book introduces a practical framework for using advanced retinal ultrasound as a non-invasive adjunct to systemic screening—particularly valuable when optical clarity is compromised or when subtle pathology escapes standard two-dimensional assessment. By integrating imaging into prevention, monitoring, and treatment validation, Dr. Bard challenges clinicians to move beyond assumption toward accountability—where interventions are not only prescribed, but observed, tracked, and verified.

RETINALSCAN 2.0 is both a continuation of imaging legacy and a forward-looking guide for clinicians, researchers, and innovators shaping the future of early disease detection.


PART 1

When Real-Time Ophthalmic Ultrasonography was first published in 1978, it represented a pivotal moment in diagnostic eye care. At a time when cross-sectional imaging was still emerging, this text offered clinicians a structured, physics-based pathway to visualize the eye beyond what direct observation allowed. Its influence extended beyond ophthalmology into radiology, neurology, and biomedical engineering.

Nearly five decades later, the principles described in that work remain remarkably relevant—yet they demand reinterpretation. Imaging technology has evolved. Clinical workflows have changed. Patients are more informed, and diagnostic expectations are higher. This revisited chapter does not replicate the original text; rather, it translates its intent into modern language, aligns it with contemporary standards, and reframes it for both curious consumers and academic professionals.



UNDERSTANDING ULTRASOUND: FROM PHYSICS TO PRACTICAL VISION CARE

At its core, ultrasound is a form of mechanical energy. Unlike light or X-rays, it requires a physical medium to travel. In ophthalmic imaging, this distinction is critical: the eye is a fluid-rich, layered organ where sound behaves predictably and safely.

Modern diagnostic ultrasound operates in the megahertz range, far above audible sound. These frequencies allow clinicians to resolve fine anatomical details without exposing patients to ionizing radiation. This safety profile is one of the reasons ultrasound remains indispensable in eye care—especially when optical clarity is compromised.

The original 1978 text emphasized the piezoelectric effect, a phenomenon still fundamental today. Certain crystals deform when electrical current is applied, generating sound waves. Conversely, returning sound waves deform the crystal again, producing electrical signals that are translated into images. While today’s probes are more sensitive and software-driven, the physics remain unchanged.


 

Why the Eye Is Uniquely Suited for Ultrasound Imaging

The eye’s anatomy makes it ideal for ultrasonic evaluation. It is compact, symmetrical, and composed of tissues with distinct acoustic properties. These characteristics allow clinicians to differentiate normal structures from pathology based on echo patterns alone.

Key advantages include:

  • Visualization through opacity (e.g., cataracts, hemorrhage)
  • Real-time motion assessment (vitreous, retina, lens)
  • Quantitative measurements (axial length, lesion depth)
  • Noninvasive evaluation of posterior structures

These principles—outlined decades ago—remain central to modern ophthalmic ultrasound practice

.


A Contemporary View of Ophthalmic Anatomy for Imaging

A thorough understanding of ocular anatomy is essential for interpreting ultrasound findings accurately, particularly in an era when imaging technology can easily outpace anatomical comprehension. The globe is not a single structure but a finely layered system, with each tissue interface interacting with sound in a distinct and predictable way. These interactions form the visual language of ultrasound.

From an imaging perspective, anatomy is understood not only by location but by acoustic behavior. Dense structures such as the sclera and lens strongly reflect sound, creating clear boundaries that define the eye’s architecture. Fluid-filled spaces, including the anterior chamber and normal vitreous, transmit sound with minimal reflection, providing contrast that allows abnormalities to stand out. The posterior wall of the eye—where retina, choroid, and sclera converge—appears as a layered echo complex whose integrity is central to diagnosing many sight-threatening conditions.

Contemporary practice emphasizes pattern recognition over rote memorization. Clinicians learn to recognize symmetry, continuity, and motion across these anatomical layers, using deviation from normal acoustic patterns as the first signal of pathology. This approach aligns closely with modern multimodal imaging, where ultrasound complements optical techniques by revealing structures obscured to light-based methods.

By reframing anatomy through its acoustic properties, ultrasound encourages a functional understanding of the eye—one that integrates structure, behavior, and clinical context. In doing so, it remains an indispensable tool for both diagnostic precision and anatomical insight.

 

Structural Overview (Imaging Perspective)

  • Cornea & Sclera: Dense tissues that define the eye’s contour
  • Anterior Chamber: Fluid-filled space enabling sound transmission
  • Lens: Highly reflective curved interface
  • Vitreous: Normally echo-free, making abnormalities conspicuous
  • Retina–Choroid–Sclera Complex: Appears as a layered posterior wall
  • Optic Nerve: Tubular structure with characteristic shadowing

While the original chapters meticulously described these structures anatomically, modern interpretation emphasizes pattern recognition, symmetry, and dynamic change rather than static memorization.


Sonoanatomy: Reading the Eye in Motion

One of the most forward-thinking aspects of the original work was its emphasis on real-time scanning—a concept that anticipated modern dynamic imaging standards long before they became routine. Unlike static imaging, real-time ultrasonography allows the examiner to observe the eye as a living, responsive system. Movement, rather than mere structure, becomes the primary source of diagnostic information.

The eye is uniquely suited to this approach. Subtle shifts in the vitreous, the independent mobility of detached membranes, or the restrained motion of solid masses reveal information that no single still image can convey. Real-time scanning transforms anatomy into behavior, allowing clinicians to distinguish pathology not only by appearance, but by how tissues respond to motion, gravity, and ocular movement.

This dynamic perspective is especially valuable when optical clarity is compromised. In the presence of hemorrhage, dense cataract, or inflammatory debris, static visualization may be impossible. Yet ultrasound can still reveal diagnostic patterns through motion—separating benign vitreous changes from sight-threatening retinal detachments or tumors.

Importantly, real-time scanning also cultivates a more active form of clinical engagement. The examiner must adjust probe position, interpret changes instantaneously, and continuously reassess assumptions. This process reinforces diagnostic attentiveness and humility, reminding clinicians that imaging is not a passive act but a dialogue between observer and anatomy.

In this way, sonoanatomy becomes more than a method of visualization—it becomes a discipline of interpretation rooted in motion, context, and experience.


Modern Clinical Interpretation

  • A normal vitreous remains echo-free during eye movement
  • Detached membranes move independently of the sclera
  • Solid masses demonstrate internal reflectivity and fixed attachment
  • Pupillary responses can be observed indirectly during scanning

These observations remain essential today, especially when evaluating trauma, unexplained vision loss, or suspected retinal pathology .


Patient History: Still the Cornerstone of Diagnostic Imaging

One of the most enduring lessons from the 1978 text is the importance of clinical context. Imaging does not replace history—it refines it.

Modern best practice aligns strongly with this philosophy:

  • Imaging protocols are tailored based on symptoms
  • Prior surgery alters expected anatomy
  • Systemic disease informs ocular risk
  • Unexpected findings prompt deeper questioning

In today’s patient-centered care models, this approach also enhances trust and compliance. Patients who feel heard are more engaged and cooperative during diagnostic procedures.

The phrase often attributed to early sonographers—“You see what you know”—remains as relevant now as it was then


 

Common Vision Complaints Revisited Through Modern Imaging

Age-Related Vision Changes

The original chapters discussed presbyopia, cataracts, glaucoma, and macular degeneration—conditions still prevalent today. What has changed is how early and precisely we can evaluate them.

  • Presbyopia: Functional, not structural—rarely requires ultrasound
  • Cataracts: Ultrasound used when fundus view is obstructed
  • Glaucoma: Optic nerve head and cupping increasingly quantified
  • Macular Degeneration: Ultrasound complements OCT in select cases

Importantly, ultrasound remains most valuable when optical methods fall short—reinforcing its role as a problem-solving modality, not a competing technology.


Bridging Past and Present: Standards Then and Now

When Real-Time Ophthalmic Ultrasonography was published in 1978, formalized imaging standards were still in their infancy. Much of what defined “best practice” was shaped by clinical experience, institutional tradition, and careful trial-and-error. Yet, even in that early era, the authors demonstrated a disciplined commitment to consistency, safety, and methodological clarity—principles that would later become the foundation of modern imaging guidelines.

Today, ophthalmic ultrasound operates within a well-defined framework of professional standards. Organizations such as the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine and international safety bodies now provide detailed guidance on probe frequencies, output limits, documentation, and operator training. These standards emphasize patient safety, reproducibility, and diagnostic accountability. Importantly, they did not replace the original philosophy of ultrasound—they codified it.

What distinguishes the earlier work is its implicit understanding that technology alone does not define quality. The original text emphasized thoughtful probe placement, awareness of artifacts, correlation with patient history, and respect for anatomical variability. These concepts remain central to contemporary practice, even as equipment has become more sophisticated. Modern standards formalize these ideas, but they cannot substitute for clinical judgment.

In bridging past and present, it becomes clear that progress in imaging has been evolutionary rather than revolutionary. Advances in resolution, digital storage, and multimodal integration have expanded what clinicians can see—but not how they must think. The responsibility to interpret images within context, to recognize limitations, and to avoid overconfidence remains unchanged.

 This continuity is instructive. It reminds us that standards are not merely rules imposed by oversight bodies; they are expressions of accumulated clinical wisdom. By revisiting the origins of ophthalmic ultrasound through a modern lens, clinicians gain a deeper appreciation for why today’s protocols exist—and why adherence to them is both a technical and ethical obligation.

In this way, the dialogue between past and present becomes a guide for future practice: one rooted in safety, clarity, and disciplined interpretation.

Since 1978, professional guidelines have evolved, but the foundational intent remains intact. Modern standards emphasize:

  • Safety (ALARA principles)
  • Standardized probe frequencies (typically 10–20 MHz)
  • Correlation with OCT, fundus photography, and MRI when indicated
  • Documentation and reproducibility

What was once pioneering has become integrated—yet the original framework made that integration possible.


 

Why This Classic Still Matters


The enduring relevance of Real-Time Ophthalmic Ultrasonography is not rooted in the age of its technology, but in the integrity of its thinking. While devices have evolved, screens have sharpened, and software has become increasingly automated, the intellectual framework presented in this work remains strikingly intact. It teaches clinicians how to think before they learn how to scan—a distinction that has only grown more important in the modern era.

At its core, this text was never merely about ultrasound. It was about interpretation, context, and responsibility. Long before artificial intelligence, automated segmentation, and color-coded overlays became commonplace, the authors emphasized that images are meaningless without anatomical understanding, clinical correlation, and disciplined skepticism. In doing so, they anticipated one of the central challenges of contemporary medicine: the risk of mistaking technological output for diagnostic truth.

Today’s clinicians operate in a landscape rich with data yet vulnerable to overreliance on machines. Optical coherence tomography, angiography, and advanced cross-sectional imaging offer extraordinary detail—but they also create a false sense of certainty. The classic ultrasound approach described in this work reminds us that diagnostic confidence must be earned, not assumed. Sound waves do not label pathology; they reveal patterns. It is the clinician who must interpret those patterns within the lived reality of the patient.

For modern learners, this book offers something increasingly rare: a model of intentional observation. Real-time ultrasound demands active engagement. The examiner must adjust probe position, observe motion, provoke response, and continuously reassess assumptions. This process cultivates diagnostic humility and attentiveness—qualities that cannot be outsourced to software.

For patients, the legacy of this work is equally meaningful. Ultrasound remains one of the most accessible, safe, and adaptable imaging tools in eye care. It thrives precisely where other technologies fail—when vision is obscured, when structures are hidden, and when answers are urgently needed. That relevance has not diminished with time; it has expanded.

Ultimately, this classic matters because it preserves a fundamental truth: technology does not replace clinical wisdom—it tests it. By revisiting and reinterpreting this work, we are not honoring the past; we are reclaiming a standard of thinking that modern medicine still depends upon.

As Dr. Michelle Peltzmann notes, “Technology may change, but anatomical truth does not.”
And as Dr. Goetze adds, “The value of this book lies not in its age, but in its discipline.”


Conclusion: A Living Foundation

This rewritten chapter stands as a bridge between generations of eye care—honoring the intellectual rigor of the past while embracing the clarity and accessibility demanded today. By translating complex principles into contemporary language, we preserve not only the knowledge, but the thinking that made it valuable.

The eye has not changed.
Sound has not changed.
What has changed is our responsibility to explain, apply, and advance.


 

SOURCE ACKNOWLEDGMENT

Adapted, reinterpreted, and contextualized from uploaded chapters of Real-Time Ophthalmic Ultrasonography (1978), with historical references cited accordingly .

1)  American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine. (2020). AIUM practice guideline for the performance of ophthalmic ultrasound examinations. Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, 39(8), E1–E7. https://doi.org/10.1002/jum.15229

2)   Byrne, S. F., & Green, R. L. (2019). Ultrasound of the eye and orbit (3rd ed.). Elsevier.

3)    Coleman, D. J., Lizzi, F. L., Silverman, R. H., & Rondeau, M. J. (2020). Ultrasonography of the eye and orbit: Evolution, current applications, and future directions. Survey of Ophthalmology, 65(6), 657–671. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.survophthal.2020.03.001

4)    Huang, D., Swanson, E. A., Lin, C. P., Schuman, J. S., Stinson, W. G., Chang, W., … Fujimoto, J. G. (1991). Optical coherence tomography. Science, 254(5035), 1178–1181. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1957169

5)    Munk, M. R., Jampol, L. M., & Simader, C. (2021). Imaging modalities in retinal disease: OCT, ultrasound, and multimodal integration. Progress in Retinal and Eye Research, 81, 100885. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.preteyeres.2020.100885

6)    Silverman, R. H. (2021). High-frequency ultrasound imaging of the eye: A review of clinical applications. Eye, 35(7), 1865–1878. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41433-020-01337-5

7)   Spaide, R. F., Fujimoto, J. G., Waheed, N. K., & Sadda, S. R. (2018). Optical coherence tomography angiography. Progress in Retinal and Eye Research, 64, 1–55. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.preteyeres.2017.11.003

8)   World Federation for Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology. (2019). WFUMB guidelines on diagnostic ultrasound safety. Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology, 45(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2018.09.002

 

Monday, January 26, 2026

Prostate Cancer Care in the Modern Era:

 Imaging as the Unifying Force across Standard Therapies

By Robert L. Bard, MD, DABR, FAIUM, FASLMS
Cancer Radiologist | Diagnostic Imaging Specialist

Prostate cancer care has evolved into a highly structured, evidence-based continuum—one that balances disease biology, patient risk stratification, and quality-of-life considerations. Across decades of clinical observation and imaging-based assessment, it is clear that no single therapy stands alone. Instead, modern prostate cancer management is defined by appropriate treatment selection, timely intervention, and objective monitoring, all anchored by diagnostic imaging.

As a cancer radiologist specializing in advanced diagnostic imaging, my role is not to replace standard therapies, but to corroborate, validate, and refine them. Imaging serves as the common language that links surveillance, intervention, and follow-up—ensuring that treatment decisions align with tumor behavior rather than assumptions alone.


Risk Stratification and the Foundation of Care

Current standards of prostate cancer treatment appropriately rely on risk group classification, clinical staging, PSA kinetics, Gleason grading, and overall patient health. These variables determine whether a patient is best served by conservative monitoring or active intervention.

Imaging has become indispensable in this process. High-resolution ultrasound, multiparametric MRI, PET-based tracers, and Doppler vascular assessment now provide real-time insights into tumor location, aggressiveness, vascularity, and response to therapy—allowing clinicians to act with precision rather than excess.


Primary Treatments (Localized / Curative Intent)

Active Surveillance and Watchful Waiting: For patients with low-risk, slow-growing prostate cancer, active surveillance remains a clinically sound and patient-centered strategy. Imaging plays a critical role in this pathway by confirming disease stability, detecting subtle progression, and reducing unnecessary biopsies or premature treatment. Surveillance is not passive—it is data-driven vigilance.

Surgery: Radical Prostatectomy- Radical prostatectomy remains a cornerstone curative option, particularly for localized disease in otherwise healthy patients. Preoperative imaging assists in surgical planning, margin assessment, and lymph node evaluation, while postoperative imaging helps identify recurrence early, should PSA levels rise.

Radiation Therapy- has advanced significantly, offering multiple precise modalities:

  • External Beam Radiation Therapy (EBRT)
  • Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT)
  • Brachytherapy (radioactive seed implantation)

In addition, proton therapy and CyberKnife® stereotactic radiosurgery represent highly refined radiation approaches. Proton therapy allows for targeted dose delivery with reduced collateral tissue exposure, while CyberKnife uses robotic X-ray guidance for sub-millimeter accuracy. Imaging is essential in treatment planning, targeting, and post-therapy assessment for all radiation modalities.


Advanced or Recurrent Disease Treatments

Hormone Therapy (Androgen Deprivation Therapy – ADT): Hormone therapy remains foundational in advanced, recurrent, or metastatic prostate cancer. Agents such as Lupron®, Firmagon®, and Orgovyx® suppress testosterone signaling to slow disease progression. Imaging helps determine treatment response, detect castration-resistant changes, and guide escalation or combination strategies.

Chemotherapy: Systemic agents such as docetaxel and cabazitaxel are used when prostate cancer spreads or becomes resistant to hormone therapy. Imaging evaluates disease burden, tracks metastatic spread, and informs timing and effectiveness of chemotherapy interventions.

Targeted Therapy: The emergence of genetically targeted therapies, including PARP inhibitors like olaparib, has introduced a new level of personalization. Imaging complements genomic testing by demonstrating phenotypic response and guiding treatment continuation or adjustment.

Immunotherapy: Immunotherapeutic approaches such as Sipuleucel-T represent an important option for select patients. While immune response may not always be immediately reflected in PSA changes, imaging provides objective insight into disease stabilization or progression.

Radiopharmaceutical Therapy: Radium-223 is a targeted radiopharmaceutical used specifically for prostate cancer metastases to bone. Imaging is critical in identifying appropriate candidates, monitoring skeletal response, and distinguishing therapeutic benefit from disease-related bone changes.

 


Ablative and Supportive Treatment Modalities

Cryotherapy and HIFU: Minimally invasive ablative techniques such as cryotherapy and high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) are increasingly utilized in focal therapy or salvage settings. Imaging ensures accurate targeting, confirms tissue ablation, and monitors adjacent structures.

Bone-Targeted Therapy: For patients with bone metastases, bisphosphonates and denosumab are essential for skeletal protection and pain management. Imaging tracks bone integrity, fracture risk, and therapeutic response.

 


Imaging as the Integrator of Prostate Cancer Care

Across all treatment categories—whether curative, systemic, or palliative—diagnostic imaging serves as the objective validator. It informs when to treat, how aggressively to intervene, and when to adjust course. Imaging transforms prostate cancer care from protocol-driven to precision-guided, reducing overtreatment while safeguarding against missed progression.

The future of prostate cancer management lies not in choosing one therapy over another, but in intelligent integration—where surgery, radiation, hormone therapy, systemic agents, and emerging technologies are applied in harmony, guided by accurate, real-time diagnostic insight.


Closing Perspective

Modern prostate cancer care is robust, multidisciplinary, and continually advancing. Current standards—from active surveillance to proton therapy, CyberKnife, systemic treatments, and supportive care—are well-founded and effective when applied appropriately. Diagnostic imaging stands at the center of this ecosystem, ensuring that every decision is informed, justified, and aligned with the patient’s unique disease profile.

In prostate cancer, seeing clearly is not optional—it is essential.

Chapter 8:

How Thermal Imaging Reveals Hidden Pathology in Pain, Neuropathy, and Vascular Disease A Clinical Walkthrough with Dr. Phil Hoekstra, MS, ...