Neuroimaging Flashcards

1
Q

Identify factors to consider in imaging.

A
  • Anatomy and Structure
  • Symmetry (can compare the two sides in images of the brain)
  • Incidentalomas (can pick up incidental findings which may not be of great significance but still worry the patient)
  • Availability and cost (CT scan cheaper, more available)
  • Practicality (in MRI need patient to be immobile for long period of time which can require giving anesthetics esp. for children, whereas in CT it’s quicker)
  • Side effects (CT uses X-ray, magnetic strength in MRI rarely leads to side effects)
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2
Q

Identify the main planes of the brain.

A
  • Sagittal (along sagittal sinus)
  • Transverse/Axial
  • Coronal (ear to ear)
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3
Q

What does CT stand for ?

A

Computerised Tomography

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4
Q

What is the difference in amount of radiation between a CT with contrast and a chest X ray ? What is the clinical significance of this ?

A

CT with contrast has 200x more radiation than one CXR

This means that, for a patient who will likely require many rounds of imaging (e.g. patient with tumour), use MRI instead (less available so much less radiation, radiation from repeated CTs can induce tumour)

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5
Q

Explain the basic technical points of a CT Scan.

A
  • Caudal view (view image as looking from the patient’s feet)
  • Diagonal image plane
  • Generated by absorption
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6
Q

Explain age effect in the context of neuroimaging.

A

As get older, there are changes in the brain which are not pathological, but rather reflex the increasing age:

-Atrophy (BUT make sure ventricles and sulci expand in proportionate way, otherwise worry about degenerative condition)

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7
Q

What would expanded ventricles without large sulci suggest ?

A

Disproportionate atrophy, so not age-related but rather possible increased ICP.

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8
Q

State how dense the main kinds of tissues are, correlating this with their color on a CT scan.

A
By decreasing density: 
Bone (white) 
Blood clot
Grey matter
White matter
CSF
Water (black) 
Fat
Air
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9
Q

If we suspect a possible bone abnormality which cannot be picked up by regular brain CT, what can be done ?

A

Can adjust window of scanner to pick up specific bone abnormalities (in which case the brain stops being visible)

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10
Q

What is the main problem with viewing structures in the posterior fossa on CT scans ? What is the solution to this ?

A

Bones can induce artifacts which can make it difficult to view structures in the posterior fossa. HENCE, use MRI scanning.

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11
Q

Detail a system for interpretation of CT/MRI scans.

A

ABCs

A-Adequacy, Alignment, Artifact
B- Bones, Blood, Brain (compare two halves)
C- Cisterns, Ventricles (symmetrical? enlarged?)
S- Subcutaneous and Surfaces (lumps?)

Symmetry for everything

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12
Q

What color is a cerebral bleed on a CT scan ?

A

Initially, white, then after times becomes darker

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13
Q

Explain how a EDH can occur.

A

If trauma to side of the head, in region of middle meningeal artery, vulnerable areas, so hemorrhage can occur (usually in younger people), and victim can fall unconscious immediately.

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14
Q

Explain how a chronic SDH can occur.

A

As get older, brains shrink and veins going to and from brain become more sensitive to trauma, so very easy if blow on head, to have rupture of vein,
which can cause to chronic SBH. Can last for weeks or months, and cause pressure effects (less likely to have acute deterioration than in acute SDH).

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15
Q

Identify examples of uses of CT Angiography.

A

-To look for a subarachnoid hemorrhage

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16
Q

Explain the basic technical points of an MRI Scan.

A
  • Caudal view (view image as looking from the patient’s feet)
  • Any plane
  • CANNOT scan someone with metal in their body (e.g. pacemaker, cochlear implants, metal around eye/head) (should ask if exposed to metal)
  • Generated by emission
  • Main sequences used are weighted views (T1 sequence, and T2 sequence)
17
Q

Identify any differences in obvious age-related differences on MRI scans, cf CT scans.

A

-Atrophy present in both

-Areas of white matter abnormalities appear around ventricles and in the white matter (AKA UBOs). Physiologically, should have at most one of these per decadeof age. They are probably vascular.
If excessive amount, may be due to MS.

18
Q

Explain the physics of MRIs.

A
  • Person goes into strong magnet
  • Atomic nuclei reorient themselves along magnetic field
  • Radiofrequency pulse flips nuclei from oriented position adn synchronizes the procession of their spin axis
  • A receiver measures the time until the nuclei return to their original orientation (structural scans) or desynchronizes (functional scans)
19
Q

Distinguish between T1 and T2 sequences in MRI scanning.

A
  • T1: spinal fluid black. Better for structural abnormalities
  • T2: spinal fluid white. Better for areas for inflammation or ischemia
20
Q

Identify variants of MRI.

A
  • Diffusion weighted
  • ADC (apparent diffusion coefficient, uses DWI) maps/matrix
  • FLAIR (fluid attenuated inversion recovery) (way of diminishing signal from fluid around brain)
  • Angiography
  • Functional (spectrography) (look at which parts of brain light up when doing particular tasks)
21
Q

What is the main difference between CT and MRI angiography ?

A

CT uses dye whereas MRI does not (relies entirely on movement of blood)

22
Q

Which MRI variants are used in strokes ?

A

DWI and ADC

23
Q

Explain how DWI and ADC may be used in strokes.

A

DWI = Diffusion weighted images (basically mix of T2 and
diffusion weighting).
ADC: Apparent Diffusion Coefficient, it’s pure diffusion of water.

Acutely, in stroke, 35 minutes after symptom onset, have high signal DWI and low signal ADC.
Over period of time, the two signals reverse:
-1-2 weeks, DWI stays high, ADC signal increases to normal.
-2 weeks +, DWI becomes lower, ADC becomes high and stays high).

This can help us to understand the timeframe of a stroke.

24
Q

Identify possible uses of MRI angiography.

A
  • To look for an aneurysm
  • To look for an arterioveinous malformation (can cause epilepsy and can bleed)
  • To look for a thrombosis (e.g. in sagittal sinus or other sinus)
25
Q

What is MS?

A

Inflammation condition where immune system attacks insulation around nerves, brain, and spinal cord (timeline is relapses and remissions usually)

26
Q

Explain how injecting a contrast agent can help diagnosis of MS in MRI Scans.

A

Contrast agent shows areas where there has been a breakdown in BBB. There are little rings of BBB breakdown which occur right at the beginning of episodes of MS.

27
Q

Give an example of possible use of functional MRI for research.

A

Understanding which parts of the brain are involved in different areas of language, e.g. spelling, processing of speech, understanding of speech.

28
Q

Identify an allele which is a risk factor for dementia.

A

APOE4

29
Q

What does SPECT stand for ? What does it require ? What is its use ?

A

Single photon Emission Tomography
Requires radioisotope, gramma rays (common)
Picks up basal ganglia, picks up dopamine (hence can use it to distinguish between someone with normal basal ganglia,
and someone with Parkinson’s)

30
Q

What does PET stand for ? What does it require ? What is its use ?

A

Positron Emission Tomography
Requires cyclotron (less available) (for generation of particular types of isotopes and specific types of receivers/scanners)
Some used for detection of cancer. Usually for research, not diagnosis (not common for diagnosis).