Imaging Flashcards

1
Q

What are X-rays?

A

When electromagnetic radiation produced by an electrical source passed through a body tissue to different degrees depending on its density.
(Plain, contrast or CT)
The denser a tissue, the fewer X-rays can pass through it (air lets all through, soft tissue lets some and bone let’s no X-rays through)

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2
Q

What are X-rays strengths?

A
  • They are good at showing things that are surrounded by black air (e.g lungs)
  • they are good at showing things surrounded by white bone
  • they are good at showing things that destroy bone (e.g bone cancer)
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3
Q

What are X-rays weaknesses?

A
  • to be visible on a simple X-ray, an abnormality must be very different density to the tissue that surrounds it (unfortunately a lot of pathology especially soft tissue is of similar density to surroundings)
  • the X-rays are fires from only one direction so in the image all the structures are superimposed
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4
Q

What are contrast studies?

A

When liquids containing dense liquids like barium or iodine are put into the spaces between tissues to block X-rays and outline the tissues clearly.

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5
Q

What is CT?

A

An X-ray with a superior contrast resolution compare to a radiograph to distinguish more easily between tissues of similar densities (often soft tissues).

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6
Q

What are the advantages of CT?

A
  • it has a superior contrast so can distinguish between soft tissues more easily
  • it Fires X-rays from all around the body to produce a cross section so the picture has no superimposition.
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7
Q

What are the disadvantages of CT?

A
  • it gives a large dose of ionising radiation (250 x normal X-ray)
  • soft tissues of VERY similar density are still indistinguishable by CT (eg pelvic organs,muscles and tendons, some areas of brain, joint cartilage and ligaments)
  • it cannot show bone marrow disease
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8
Q

What is ultrasound?

A

Piezoelectric crystals in a transducer convert electrical energy to acoustic energy to find where structures are.
It transmits sound pulses and listens for them to be reflected and then converts it into a computer image

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9
Q

What are the advantages of ultrasound?

A
  • it doesn’t require ionising radiation
  • it can distinguish even between areas of VERY similar density.
  • it is quick, easy and relatively cheap
  • the transducer can be moved to get a complete survey
  • body fluids readily transmit ultrasound whereas solid structures within the fluid reflect it.
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10
Q

What are the disadvantages of ultrasound?

A
  • It is difficult to obtain good images on patients who do not have good skin, have very deep structures, are overweight or if the wrong transducer is chosen.
  • some tissues have identical acoustic properties
  • blocked by bone (eg can’t be used on brain)
  • blocked by gas (can’t be used in lungs etc)
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11
Q

What is MRI?

A

The MRI scanner creates a strong magnetic field which energises the body’s proteins and then waits for a return signal produced by the protons. The returned signal is used to create an image.

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12
Q

What are the problems that can occur in an MRI scanner?

A
  • frostbite and thermal burns
  • deafness due to the sound (usually given earplugs)
  • disturbance of pacemakers, heart valves, shrapnel and other foreign ferrous bodies
  • missile injuries
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13
Q

What are the advantages of MRI?

A
  • can provide complete assessment of the brain
  • sensitive way to asses soft tissue injuries especially in deep tissues where ultrasound is less accurate
  • excellent for imaging of spinal canal disease
  • interior of joints can be imaged
  • no ionising radiation
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14
Q

What are the weaknesses of MRI?

A
  • expensive
  • time consuming
  • potentially dangerous
  • claustrophobic
  • poor at showing details of lungs
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15
Q

What is the role of imaging?

A
  • make or confirm diagnosis
  • narrow a differential diagnosis
  • to ‘stage’ a known disease eg cancer for treatment
  • to monitor effects of a treatment
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