CM-Musculoskeletal Radiology Flashcards
What are the 7 things that can be viewed on plain film?
- cortex
- trabeculae
- Joint space
- joint fluid
- muscles and fat
- soft tissue gas
- foreign objects
How does the look of fat and fluid look different on the plain film?
Fat is darker gray and fluid is a lighter grey.
This helps identify effusions
What 4 things are radiographs not able to see? What would you do instead?
- complex bone anatomy (overlapping joints)- CT
- marrow edema for early bone infection/tumor- MRI
- fine soft tissue detail : MRI
- metabolic activity : PET/ NM
What is a Colles fracture?
Which bone is fractured?
It is seen most frequently in people with what?
The fracture you get when you fall on an outstretched wrist.
It is fracture of the distal radius with dorsal displacement of the wrist/hand
Seen in people with osteoporosis
what 3 things do you need to do to get a good radiographic exam?
- get at least 2 orthogonal planes (one view is no views)
- use proper technique (kV, mAs)
- ensure good patient positioning:
- centering the body part of interest
- true AP, lateral, one or more standard oblique
What is kV and mAs for radiography technique?
kV determines contrast. Less kV = more contrast
mAs determines density. too much mAs = overexposed film
Describe the 3 steps in systematically reading musculoskeletal radiographs.
- check the bone
- alignment (normal shape)
- periosteum (should be invisible, if calcified= tumor or fracture)
- cortex (smooth/uniform around the bone)
- cancellous bone (uniform/orderly in metaphysis) - check the joint
- alignment (articulated bones centered to each other)
- joint space (uniform and wide enough for cartilage) - check the soft tissue
- edema (swelling)
- effusion (displaced articular fat pads or fluid levels)
How should the periosteum look on a normal radiograph?
It should be invisible.
If it is calcified, it is a sign of fracture or malignancy
What is the difference between a complete and incomplete fracture?
Who is more likely to get an incomplete fracture?
Complete goes from cortex to cortex.
Incomplete does not cross from cortex to cortex. Children are more likely to get incomplete fractures because their bones are more elastic.
What is the difference between a simple and comminuted fracture?
Simple = 2 bone pieces Comminuted = 3 or more separate fragments of bone
What is the difference between closed and open fracture?
If the hematoma around the fracture communicates with the outside world, it is open (also called compound fracture)
This appears as gas tracking down the fracture.
What is an impacted fracture?
What is an overriding/overlapping fracture?
Impacted: the bones fragments are driven together.
Overriding: fragments of long bone lie side by side
What is angulation?
What is rotation?
A: You can describe something as apex lateral or medial angulation of the distal fragment. It is description given to the break
R: the bone turns after it breaks. most serious misalignment and toughest to see
What are the 5 signs of fracture on plain fillm?
- disrupted cortex
- disrupted trabeculae
- soft tissue swelling
- fat plane displacement
- hemarthrosis/lipohemarthrosis
If the elbow fat pad is displaced after trauma, how should you treat the situation?
Treat it as an occult radial head fracture until proven otherwise.