Diagnostic Imaging Flashcards
give the size, shape, number, location, position, and opacity of the kidneys on radiographs
size:
dog: 2.5-3.5x the length of L2 on VD
cat: 2-3x the length of L2 on VD
shape:
dog: elongated bean
cat: more rounded and may see fat in renal sinus at hilus level
number: 2
location: retroperitoneal
position: right is more cranial than left
opacity: homogenous soft tissue opacity
why is the right kidney of dogs often difficult to see on radiographs in VD?
it sits in the renal fossa of the liver and the liver and kidney touch, leading to effacement and loss of margins
are normal ureters seen in plain radiographs? what can often be confused for ureters?
no! the deep circumflex iliac arteries are often a fake out for the ureters
describe the urinary bladder on radiographs, including one limitation to radiography (4)
- homogenous soft tissue opacity
- ligamentous supports and adjacent mesentery contain fat that allows for visualization of bladder margins
- thickness of bladder wall cannot be visualized since urine has the same opacity; need contrast to visualize wall thickness
- size is highly variable based on amount of urine
what are the 3 portions of the bladder?
apex: cranial
body: middle
neck: caudal
what is special about feline urethra thanks to their large amount of abdominal fat?
can see a relatively long pre-pelvic part of the urethra on radiographs
describe the urethra in females
short and wide
describe the urethra in males
3 parts:
prostatic, membranous, and penile (beginning at os penis)
how do you radiograph the entire urethra?
make sure to include a caudally collimated radiograph (butt shot)
what are the 2 types of contrast studies for the urinary system and which parts are they used for?
- kidneys: excretory urography (IV) or visualize via ultrasound
- ureters: excretory urography
- urinary bladder: retrograde urethrocystogram (catheter) or visualize via ultrasound
- urethra: retrograde urethrocystogram
give synonyms, contraindication, complications, type of contrast, and phases of excretory urography
synonyms: intravenous pyelogram or urogram
contraindication: dehydration
complications: very rare
contrast type: iodinated, nonionic
phases:
vascular: during injection of contrast, visualize renal vessels
nephrogram: 10-30 seconds post injection, visualize renal parenchyma
urethrogram: 3 minutes post injection, visualize renal diverticular regions, pelvis, and ureters
what is a paddle study?
using a compressive devise like a wooden spoon or a paddle to improve visualization of the urinary bladder, uterus, or masses in the caudal abdomen by spreading the structures out
give the size, echogenicity, position, margin, and shape of the bladder on ultrasound
size: depends on amount of urine
echogenicity: anechoic (no echo) thin echogenic wall
position: caudal abdomen
margin: smooth
shape: tear drop with blind apex and pointed trigone
what are ureteral papillae?
a normal ureteral insertion in the dorsal trigone area of the bladder; hard to visualize but can use dopplar to see jets of urine from ureteral peristalsis
be able to identify the cortex, medulla, and renal pelvis on long and short axis ultrasound pictures
see ppt