Pulsed Doppler echocardiography is a noninvasive method with high sensitivity and specificity for the assessment of tricuspid regurgitation. In patients with tricuspid regurgitation, pansystolic unusual Doppler signals are detected in the right atrial cavity, which are interpreted as tricuspid regurgitant flow signals. They distributed in a spindle-shaped area from the tricuspid orifice toward the right atrial posterior wall in parallel with the interatrial septum. The orientation of the range where the regurgitant Doppler signals are detected in the right atrial cavity shows the direction of the regurgitant jet. However, such a result is determined mainly in patients with functional tricuspid regurgitation. In regard to patients with organic tricuspid lesion, different considerations may be necessary. Semiquantitative grading of the severity of regurgitation is possible, based on the distance covered by the regurgitant signals from the tricuspid orifice. Tricuspid regurgitation is demonstrated also by contrast echocardiography. The severity is graded based on the distance reached by regurgitant curvilinear contrast echoes from the tricuspid valve in the M-mode echocardiography. If the ultrasound beam is adequately directed through the tricuspid orifice, the grade estimated by the contrast echoes are well correlated with that by the Doppler. However, if the M-mode is performed without the guide by the two-dimensional image, it may miss the most adequate beam direction for the observation, resulting in underestimating severity. The influences of tricuspid regurgitation are generally seen in the flow pattern of the major veins. However, they are more sharply reflected by the flow condition in the right atrial cavity than by the flows patterns in the major veins.