Radiology Flashcards

1
Q

Indications for x-ray

A
  1. Trauma (# or disloc.)
  2. Infective processes (pneumonia etc.)
  3. Skeletal survey (malignancies or disorders of bine growth)
  4. Follow-up after treatment
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2
Q

Advantages (x-rays)

A
  1. Easily accessible
  2. Quick
  3. Doesn’t require specialized ax
  4. Inexpensive
  5. Bed side
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3
Q

Disadvantages (x-rays)

A
  1. 2 dimensional image or 3 dimensional structure (overlapping of structures)
  2. Ionising radiation (risk of malignancy)
  3. Caution in pregnant pts (fetus is susceptible to ionizing radiation - risk of malignancy)
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4
Q

Conventional Radiography (x-rays)

A
  1. X-rays are a form of energy
  2. Electromagnetic spectrum
  3. 2 dimen of 3 dimen structure.
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5
Q

Ultrasound

A
  1. Shooting beam of high frequency sound into a soft tissue
  2. Sound returns to same probe which sent it
  3. Various tissues bounce signal back creating the image
  4. Sound wave can’t travel well in the air therefore gel is used to reduce air btw probe & pt - reduces reflect & acoustic impedance for clear pic
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6
Q

Ultrasound

A
  1. Curved probes: lower frequency & penetrated deeper
  2. Linear probes: higher frequency & superficial structures
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7
Q

Indications (ultra.)

A
  1. Solid & fluid-containing structures/organs
  2. Not for air containing structures like bone, cardiac or pelvic or abdominal organs
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8
Q

Advantages (ultra)

A
  1. Portable and cheap
  2. No ionising radiation (children or pregnant pts)
  3. Real time imaging
  4. User-dependent
  5. Doppler studies
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9
Q

CT scan

A
  1. X -ray tube that spins fast around pt with a row of receptors on the other side of the patient also spinning on the same axis
  2. Attenuation of the X-ray beam is constantly recorded at various angles around the patient.
  3. 3D images: multi planar rendering & volume rendering
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10
Q

CT (advantages

A
  1. Quick
  2. Gold standard for trauma & lung
  3. Good for calcification & staging malignancy
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11
Q

Disadvantages (CT)

A
  1. High dose of ionising radiation
  2. Not bedside
  3. Motion artefacts
  4. Caution pregnancy & paediatric
  5. No contrast medium in renal failure
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12
Q

Contrast vs non-contrast

A

• Non- contrast: bleeds, stones
• Contrast: infections, malignancies, vascular pathology (dural venous sinus thrombosis etc )
• CT angiograms: aneurysms, dissections, injuries

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13
Q

MRI

A

• Align all the Hydrogen (Free Proton) atoms
• Radiowaves interact with spinning H+
• Protons flip back into their original direction, and give off radio waves
• “Coils” detect these radio waves.
• Characteristics of the tissues determine signal retrieved

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14
Q

MRI (advantages)

A

• Best soft tissue resolution
• Brain, spinal cord and MSK
• No radiation
• Contrast (gadolinium) – not iodine based, more renal friendly

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15
Q

MRI (disadvantages)

A

• Very expensive
• Long procedure (30 mins – 1 hour)
• Not easily accessible
• Cannot be done in emergency situations
• Expert interpretation

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16
Q

Bone scan

A

• Nuclear medicine
• Poor anatomical differentiation
• Radioactive substance
• ‘Hot spots’ – cancer, inflammation, infection
• Radiation emitted from the patient