Radiology - Quality Assurance & Fault Analysis Flashcards
what is the purpose of quality assurance?
To ensure consistently adequate diagnostic information with radiation exposure being ALARP.
why should digital receptors be checked?
Since they are reusable they undergo wear & tear and mishandling – This impacts the image quality.
when should digital receptors be checked?
Every 3 months (or sooner if required)
what are we assessing in digital receptors?
The receptor: ensure no visible damage to casing/wiring and check if its clean.
The image uniformity: by exposing it to an unattenuated x-ray beam and check if the resulting image is uniform (shows a consistent shade of grey – it is damaged it will be different shades of grey)
The image quality: take a radiograph of a test object and assess the resulting image against what an ideal image would look like (baseline)
what damage are we looking for in digital phosphor plates? (3)
(white areas)
Scratches – white lines
Cracking – network of white lines
Delamination – white areas around the edge
what damage are we looking for in digital Solid state sensors?
less damage occurs since theyre encased.
Sensor damage – white squares or straight lines
what colour is damage to digital receptors?
white
what colour is damage to film receptors?
black - due to sensitisation of the silver halide crystals
what types of damage are commonly see in film receptors?
Nail marks, bite marks and fingerprints
how do we test image quality?
using the step wedge technique
describe the step wedge technique used to test image quality. (when, how, damage)
- This is carried out every morning for film, done regularly with digital just not every morning.
- Expose to a normal clinical exposure (i.e. a tooth) and then compare the image to a baseline.
- The baseline image must be able to identify all 6 steps of the overlapping layers of lead foil.
- A damaged receptor would have poor contrast between the layers
using the step wedge technique how could you tell that the receptor was damaged?
A damaged receptor would have poor contrast between the layers
what are the 3 components of quality assurance?
- Image quality rating – grade each image
- Image quality analysis – carried out periodically: calculating the success rate of images and identify trends of suboptimal (non-diagnostic) images.
- Reject analysis – Record and analyse every unacceptable/non-diagnostic image
how do we rate the image quality in quality assurance?
An image can either be A – acceptable or N – not acceptable; (use this instead of grading)
Acceptable = no/minimal error and can answer the clinical question.
what is the target for diagnostically acceptable digital radiographs we have to meet?
95% acceptable