Radiology - Quality Assurance & Fault Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

what is the purpose of quality assurance?

A

To ensure consistently adequate diagnostic information with radiation exposure being ALARP.

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2
Q

why should digital receptors be checked?

A

Since they are reusable they undergo wear & tear and mishandling – This impacts the image quality.

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3
Q

when should digital receptors be checked?

A

Every 3 months (or sooner if required)

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4
Q

what are we assessing in digital receptors?

A

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)

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5
Q

what damage are we looking for in digital phosphor plates? (3)

A

(white areas)

Scratches – white lines

Cracking – network of white lines

Delamination – white areas around the edge

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6
Q

what damage are we looking for in digital Solid state sensors?

A

less damage occurs since theyre encased.

Sensor damage – white squares or straight lines

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7
Q

what colour is damage to digital receptors?

A

white

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8
Q

what colour is damage to film receptors?

A

black - due to sensitisation of the silver halide crystals

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9
Q

what types of damage are commonly see in film receptors?

A

Nail marks, bite marks and fingerprints

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10
Q

how do we test image quality?

A

using the step wedge technique

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11
Q

describe the step wedge technique used to test image quality. (when, how, damage)

A
  • 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
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12
Q

using the step wedge technique how could you tell that the receptor was damaged?

A

A damaged receptor would have poor contrast between the layers

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13
Q

what are the 3 components of quality assurance?

A
  1. Image quality rating – grade each image
  2. Image quality analysis – carried out periodically: calculating the success rate of images and identify trends of suboptimal (non-diagnostic) images.
  3. Reject analysis – Record and analyse every unacceptable/non-diagnostic image
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14
Q

how do we rate the image quality in quality assurance?

A

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.

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15
Q

what is the target for diagnostically acceptable digital radiographs we have to meet?

A

95% acceptable

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16
Q

what is the target for diagnostically acceptable film radiographs we have to meet?

A

90% acceptable

17
Q

What must we know before determining whether a radiograph is diagnostically acceptable?

A

We must know what teeth we should be analysing

We must know what parts of the tooth/teeth we want to analyse

We must know what other structure should be present

We must know the extend of the pathology we are wanting to see

18
Q

What should diagnostically acceptable bitewings show?

A
  • Upper and lower crowns (all of the crown)
  • The mesial aspect of the first posterior tooth (1st premolar) and the distal aspect of the last standing tooth (this may require > 1 radiograph)
  • Approximal surfaces/contact points without overlap (impossible in crowding)
19
Q

What should diagnostically acceptable periapicals show?

A
  • The entire tooth and root
  • The periapical bone
  • The crown
20
Q

What is fault analysis?

A

Identifying and explaining fault so they can be resolved.

21
Q

what are potential faults that can occur? (6)

A
  • Too dark/pale
  • Poor contrast
  • Unsharp
  • Distorted
  • Over-collimated
  • Receptor marks/damage
22
Q

what causes cone cutting?

A

Incorrect assembly of the receptor holder

Incorrect alignment of the x-ray tube and the receptor holder

Incorrect orientation of the rectangular collimator

23
Q

what exposure factors cause an image to have the incorrect radiodensity (too dark/light)? (3)

A

Incorrect exposure settings

The patient’s tissues are too thick

Faulty timer on the unit

24
Q

what developing factors cause an image to have the incorrect radiodensity (too dark/light)?

A

Incorrect duration of development
- short time = pale

Incorrect temp
- cold = pale

Incorrect concentration
- dilute = pale

25
Q

what VIEWING FACTORS cause an image to have the incorrect radiodensity (too dark/light)? (3)

A

Inappropriate light source for film i.e not using light box

Inappropriate display screen/monitor (digital)

Excessive environmental light