דימות Flashcards
the five denseties of x-ray
barium (metal, white) bone muscle blood fat air (black) (most to least)
GI Fluoroscopy
Contrast:
Barium sulfate suspension
Telebrix (water soluble)
Administration: oral or rectal
Single contrast vs double contrast (with air, usually not SI)
barium enema
could be fecal or polips, etc.
bowls need to be clean before exam
Imaging Planes
axial-
rostral to coudal, like sausage
coronal-
left is right and right is left, we look at the body from frontal perspective
sagital-
awnterior poterior, we look at the body from lateral perspective
Hounsfield units
Range -1000 to 1000 Metal = 1000 Water = 0 HU Air = -1000 Soft tissue 50-70 HU Fat = -10 , -20 HU
CT window
computer manipulation of the shades of gray we see (no need for additional x-ray!)
Triphasic CT
before contrast
after contrast -arteria
after contrast- veins
in tumors lighting from periphery to center
ultrasound scale
Anechoic- black, air
Hyperechogenic- white in contrast to serounding tissue
Hypoechogenic- black in contrast to serounding tissue
isoechogenic- same contrast as serounding tissue
ultrasound imaging
ideal for soft tissue, fluid spaces
unsutable for air spaces and boney structurs
with which atom does MRI deal with?
hydrogen
When placed in a magnetic field, align either with or opposite to the direction of the field
MRI contraindications?
Pacemakers
Metal shrapnel
Claustrophobia
Renal failure (contrast is problematic in those)
Radiologic Approach to Abdominal Pain
CXR for free air under the diaphragm or lower lobe pneumonia
Supine and upright abdominal x-rays (empty GI)
Ultrasound, CT scan, IVP, barium enema, UGI, endoscopy and colonoscopy when indicated
Types of abdominal pain
Colicky pain- distention of a hollow viscus, such as bowel
Somatic pain -inflammation of the parietal peritoneum – “בטן כירורגית”
Visceral pain-
inflammation of the visceral peritoneum and capsule of solid organs (hepatitis)
Radiologic Approach to Abdominal Pain (locations)
RUQ/LUQ- ultrasound, Visceral organs
LLQ/RLQ- CT, air filled organs, Bowel pathologies
Right Upper Quadrant findings
Gallbladder- most common (US) Acute cholecystitis (gall wall thickening) choledocholithiasis
Liver- distention of capsule (US) hepatitis liver abscess metastasis portal cein thrombosis
pancreas- (US, CT) acurte pancreatitis (murky serrounding fat)
Stomach /duodenum (ENDOSCOPY)
Gastritis, PUD
Non abdominal causes (CXR)
RLL pneumonia