Abdominal imaging Flashcards
1
Q
List the indications for further investigation/diagnostic imaging of the abdomen
A
- Abdominal pain
- Weight loss/weight gain
- Diarrhoea, vomiting
- Not responding to other treatments
- Palpation of an obstruction
2
Q
List the advantages of abdominal ultrasonography
A
- can be performed standing or recumbent
- No need for sedation or anaesthesia
- Does not involve ionising radiation
- thickness of bowel can be imaged and measured
- Lymph nodes can be examined
- Intestinal motility can be assessed
3
Q
List the disadvantages of abdominal ultrasonography
A
- Gas can cause reverberation (comet tail artefacts) and shadowing
- patients need to be starved for min 12 hours before, preferably 24 hours before
- barium studies need to be done after ultrasound not before!
4
Q
List the 5 layers of the GIT wall and state their ultrasonographic appearance
A
- (Lumen - heterogenous, can appear very different)
- Mucosal surface: hyperechoic
- Mucosa: hypoechoic
- Submucosa: hyperechoic
- Muscularis: hypoechoic
- Serosa: hyperechoic
5
Q
Describe how you would carry out an ultrasound of the stomach and small intestine
A
- Sagittal plane, notch cranially
- Start just cuadal to xiphoid
- Move to LHS = fundus and body of stomach
- RHS = pylorus (reduced luminal size, pylorus seen as rounded mass of mixed echogenicity caudal to liver)
- Turn to transverse plane, fan transducer cranially and caudally to visualise limits of stomach
- Move caudally until loop of intestine appears
- Canvisualise longitudinal and transverse views (lines or rings)
6
Q
Describe how you would carry out an ultrasound of the large intestine
A
- ventral abdomen, caudal to stomach, just to left of midline can see descening colon
- Similar appeance to small intestine but larger diameter, slower contractions, more echogenic luminal contents, thinner wall
7
Q
Describe how you would carry out a ventrodorsal radiograph of the abdomen in the small animal
A
- Dorsal recumbency using trough
- Last rib centred under x-ray beam
- Edge of trough not inprimary beam
- Hindlimbs can beleft flexed, must not over lie abdomen
- Check for axial rotation
- Centring: midline of spine, level with caudal edge of last rib
- Collimation: caudall to femoral greater trochanter, should not include whole of abdomen to rib 7 cranially - include skin edges
- Exposure factors see chart on wall (if depth is over 10cm use grid and bucky tray)
- Label
- Artefacts (sandbags)
- Should be done in expiratory pause
8
Q
Describe how you would carry out a right lateral radiograph of the small animal abdomen
A
- Right lateral recumbency, abdomen under beam
- Foam wedge between hindlimbs so are parallel, extend caudally, tie (ensure quads not obscuring caudal abdomen)
- Secure neck with sandbac - split so dont strangle!
- Centring: level with caudal border of last rib, half way down abdomen
- Collimation/l caudal to femoral greater trochanters, should now include wholeof abdoomen to diaphragm (rib 7) cranially, dorsally spine, ventrally skin surface
- Exposure factors see wall chart, if over 10cm use grid and bucky tray
- Lavel
- Artefacts - sandbags