Title: Radiologiclal Investigations
1Radiodiagnosis - An overview
Dept of Radio-Diagnosis Imaging, Father Muller
Medical College , Mangalore
2Discovery of X-Rays
- Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen,a German physicist,
discovered x rays on Nov.8,1895. - In recognition of his outstanding contribution to
science, he was awarded the first Nobel prize for
physics in 1901.
3 The picture that caught the scientific world by
storm was the X-ray photograph of his wifes
hand, taken on December 22, 1895. It clearly
showed the structure of the bones and the ring
she was wearing.
4Conventional Radiology
- Conventional X rays
- Barium studies of GIT
- IVU,MCU, ACU
- HSG
- Myelogram
- Sialography
- T-tube cholangiography
5Conventional x-ray units fluoroscopy
6COMPUTERISED RADIOGRAPHY
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8Chest radiographs
9Abdominal radiographs
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11Musculoskeletal Radiographs
12Spine
13Skull radiograph
14Pediatric radiographs
15 limitations of Chest Radiography
- Some medical conditions of the chest will not
show up on the image. Therefore, a normal chest
x-ray does not necessarily rule out all problems
in the chest. - For example, patients with asthma exacerbations
can have a normal chest x-ray. There are some
cancers that are too small or are difficult to
visualize and may not be identified. - Blood clots to the lungs (pulmonary embolism)
cannot be seen on chest x-rays and require
additional study. - A chest CT may be requested to further clarify a
finding seen on the chest x-ray or to look for an
abnormality not visible on a chest x-ray in order
to answer the clinical problem.
16- The degree of involvement of the lung, as well as
the distribution of disease, and anatomic
location may be better evaluated with chest CT,
helping aid the diagnosis. - Some diseases, such as chronic lung disease, are
frequently evaluated with HRCT (high-resolution
CT). - The chest x-ray and the physical examination
should be correlated. The information each
procedure provides can give the physician a
clearer understanding of the patient's health.
17- X-rays are a type of electromagnetic radiation,
are invisible and create no sensation when they
pass through the body. - The chest x-ray is one of the lowest radiation
exposure medical examinations performed today. - Special care is taken during chest x-ray
examinations to ensure maximum safety for the
patient by paying attention to correct x-ray beam
energies.
18- Shielding the abdomen and pelvis with a lead
apron helps reduce unnecessary radiation to the
abdomen and pelvis. - Women should always inform their doctor or x-ray
technologist if there is any possibility that
they are pregnant. - The effective radiation dose from this procedure
is about 0.1 mSv, which is about the same as the
average person receives from background radiation
in 10 days
19INTRAVENOUS UROGRAM (IVU)
- Radiographic examination of urinary tract
including renal parenchyma, calyces and pelvis
after iv inj. Of contrast media - There has been decline in IVU in past 10 years
due to - Development of new modalities like CT, USG
- Cost containment
- Adverse effect of contrast media
20IVU
21ASCENDING CYSTO URETHROGRAM (ACU)
22MICTURATING CYSTOURETHROGRAM(MCU)
- Demonstrate the lower urinary tract and helps to
detect the existance of any vesico-urethral
reflux, bladder pathology and congenital and
acquired anomalies of bladder outflow tract
23BARIUM STUDIES
- BARIUM SWALLOW
- BARIUM MEAL
- BARIUM MEAL FOLLOW THROUGH
- ENTEROCLYSIS
- BARIUM ENEMA
24BARIUM SULPHATE
- Ba has high atomic number 56
- Non absorbable /non toxic
- Insoluble in water/liquid
- Inert to tissues
- Can be used for double contrast studies
25BARIUM SWALLOW
- Contrast study from oral cavity upto the fundus
of stomach
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27Barium meal
- Radiological study of oesophagus, stomach,
duodenum and proximal jejunum
28BARIUM MEAL FOLLOW THROUGH
- To study the suspected small bowel
abrormalities - Major methods
- Small bowel follow through examination
- Dedicated small bowel follow through examination
- Enteroclysis
- Peroral pneumocolon
- Retrograde small bowel examination
29BMFT
30Enteroclysis
- Radiological study of small bowel from jejunum
to IC junction and instillation of contrast
through the tube
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34Barium enema
- Study of large bowel by administration of
contrast through rectum
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37HYSTEROSALPINGOGRAPHY(HSG)
- Contrast is injected in the uterus to study the
uterine cavity and fallopian tubes
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39Sialography
- Study to demonstrate the parotid or
submandibular glands by injection of contrast
medium into duct system
40T-tube cholangiography
- To study the CBD in post operative period prior
to removial of T-tube
41MYELOGRAM
- Injection of contrast medium in spinal
subarachnoid space to study the stuctural details
of spinal cord, conus medullaris nerve roots
spinal canal
42MYELOGRAM
43Mammography
44Indications for mammography
- Screening for CA in symptomatic women aged 50
years and over - Women above 35 years with high risk (family h/o
breast CA) - Symptomatic women with breast lump
- Surveillance of the breast following local
excision of breast CA
45Ultrasonography
- Grey scale ultrasound
- Colour Doppler
- Musculoskeletal USG
- 3D/4D ultrasound
- USG guided procedures
46ULTRASONOGRAPHY
- Important technique for tomographic imaging of
soft tissues - Provides real time images
- Major application in heart, abdomen, pelvis,
neck, breast, peripheries neonatal brain. - Most imp application in obstetrics due to
combination of safety and tomographinc imaging of
fetus has rendered it indispensable
47- LIMITATIONS ultrasound doesn't cross tissue-gas
or tissue-bone boundary ? poor window - ADVANTAGE just a light pressure on the skin
non invasive - Preparation is minimal
- Ideally fasting and full bladder is required
48Doppler
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50Comuterised Tomography (CT)
51Clinical application of spiral CT
- General survey
- Vascular studies CT angiography
- Imaging of trauma
- Pediatric studies
- Oncology- radiotherapy treatment planning
- Gastrointestinal studies- CT enteroclysis
- Newer tech- cardiac ct, VRT, MIP, virtual
endoscopy - Biopsy and drainage procedures
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53MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING (MRI)
54Clinical application of MRI
- MRI provides information that differs from other
imaging modalities. - Its major technological advantage is that it can
characterize and discriminate among tissues using
their physical and biochemical properties (water,
iron, fat, and extravascular blood and its
breakdown products). - Blood flow, cerebrospinal fluid flow, and
contraction and relaxation of organs, both
physiologic and pathologic, can be evaluated. - Because calcium emits no signal on spin echo
images, tissues surrounded by bone, such as the
contents of the posterior fossa and the spine,
can be imaged.
55Continued
- MRI produces sectional images of equivalent
resolution in any projection without moving the
patient. - The ability to obtain images in multiple planes
adds to its versatility and diagnostic utility
and offers special advantages for radiation
and/or surgical treatment planning. - Excellent delineation of anatomic structures
results from inherent high levels of contrast
resolution.
56- MRI acquisitions can be programmed to encode for
various physiological phenomena including
velocity of moving tissue or blood, diffusion of
water (useful in detecting stroke) - MR image acquisition does not use ionizing
radiation. - Because it requires little patient preparation
and is noninvasive, patient acceptability is
high. - MRI contrast agents are very well tolerated and
are much less likely than x-ray contrast agents
to cause allergic reactions or alter kidney
function.
57Limitations of MRI
- Because of the small bore of the magnet, some
patients experience claustrophobia and have
difficulty in cooperating during the study. Some
obese patients cannot be examined. - Some patients, particularly acutely ill patients,
cannot cooperate and movement artifacts may
result. - Patient throughput is slow compared with other
imaging modalities.
58- Patients with pacemakers and certain
ferromagnetic appliances cannot be studied. - MRI units require careful shielding.
- Greater technological expertise is required for
utilization of MRI than for most other imaging
modalities. - MRI equipment is expensive to purchase, maintain,
and operate
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61Interventional procedures
- FLUROSCOPY GUIDED-
- USG GUIDED -
- CT GUIDED-
- ANGIOGRAPHY AND INTERVENTIONAL PROCEDURES
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67Current trends in Radio Diagnosis.
68MDCT
Multi Detector CT. (MDCT) Presently 64 and 128
slice Head to toe in just 4 sec.
69SUPERCON MRI
- 1.5 3 Tesla
- MR spectroscopy
- Functional MRI
70PACS AND TELERADIOLOGY
71Digital Radiography
72Positron Emission Tomography PET CT fusion
73Thank You