ARDMS SPI Sonographic Principles Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)

Download a free ARDMS SPI practice test PDF. Print and study offline for the ARDMS Sonographic Principles and Instrumentation examination.

Free ARDMS SPI Practice Test PDF Download

The ARDMS Sonographic Principles and Instrumentation (SPI) examination is the mandatory physics prerequisite that every candidate must pass before earning any ARDMS specialty credential. This page provides a free, printable ARDMS SPI practice test PDF covering all eight content domains tested on the actual exam — download it now and study on your own schedule, offline or on paper.

The PDF includes questions on ultrasound physics fundamentals, transducer technology, pulse-echo instrumentation, image quality parameters, Doppler principles, artifact recognition, and bioeffects and safety. Understanding these principles at a deep level is what separates candidates who pass on the first attempt from those who need to retake.

ARDMS SPI Exam Fast Facts

What the ARDMS SPI Practice Test PDF Covers

Each section below maps to a major content domain in the SPI exam blueprint. Study each domain systematically and use the PDF questions to test your recall before exam day.

Ultrasound Physics Fundamentals

Sound waves are mechanical longitudinal waves that require a medium to propagate. Key properties tested include frequency (cycles per second, measured in MHz), wavelength (inversely proportional to frequency at a given propagation speed), and propagation speed in soft tissue (~1,540 m/s — the assumed constant used by all ultrasound systems). Acoustic impedance (density × propagation speed) determines how much sound is reflected at tissue boundaries. Attenuation (absorption, reflection, and scattering combined) increases with frequency and distance.

Transducer Technology

The piezoelectric effect is the physical principle that makes ultrasound transducers work: applying electrical voltage to piezoelectric crystals causes mechanical vibration (producing sound), and incoming sound pressure creates electrical voltage (receiving echoes). Transducer types include linear array (high frequency, near-field imaging, vascular/musculoskeletal), curvilinear array (lower frequency, wider field of view for abdominal/OB), and phased array (small footprint, steered beam for cardiac). Frequency selection involves a trade-off: higher frequency improves resolution but reduces penetration depth.

Pulse-Echo Instrumentation

Pulse repetition frequency (PRF) is the number of pulses emitted per second. Duty factor is the fraction of time the system is transmitting (PRF × pulse duration). Spatial pulse length equals the number of cycles in a pulse multiplied by the wavelength — shorter spatial pulse length improves axial resolution. Understanding how these parameters interact with depth settings is critical for instrumentation questions.

Image Quality Parameters

Axial resolution (along the beam direction) is determined by spatial pulse length — shorter pulses resolve closely spaced targets along the beam axis. Lateral resolution (perpendicular to the beam) depends on beam width at the focal zone — the narrowest beam width produces the best lateral resolution. Contrast resolution describes the ability to distinguish tissues of slightly different echogenicity. Dynamic range is the ratio of the largest to smallest signal the system can process, measured in decibels.

Doppler Principles

The Doppler effect describes the frequency shift that occurs when sound reflects from a moving target (red blood cells). Continuous wave (CW) Doppler has no depth discrimination but can measure very high velocities. Pulsed wave (PW) Doppler provides depth-specific sampling but is limited by the Nyquist limit: the maximum detectable Doppler shift is half the PRF. Exceeding this limit causes aliasing (velocity wrapping). The angle of insonation affects measured velocity — accurate Doppler angle correction requires the angle to be less than 60 degrees.

Artifacts

Common SPI artifacts: acoustic shadowing (reduced echoes distal to a highly attenuating structure like calcification), posterior acoustic enhancement (increased echoes distal to a fluid-filled structure), reverberation (repeated reflections between parallel interfaces), mirror image (duplication across a strong reflector like the diaphragm), side lobe and grating lobe artifacts (off-axis energy creating spurious echoes).

Bioeffects and Safety

The Thermal Index (TI) estimates the potential for tissue heating. The Mechanical Index (MI) estimates the potential for non-thermal effects including cavitation. The ALARA principle (As Low As Reasonably Achievable) requires sonographers to minimize exposure time and output power while obtaining the diagnostic information needed.

Free ARDMS SPI Practice Tests Online

Want interactive timed practice before exam day? Our ARDMS SPI practice test lets you answer questions in exam simulation mode with instant feedback and detailed explanations for every answer. Use the online tests alongside this printable PDF for maximum preparation coverage.