1 / 155

VET-120 Diagnostic Imaging

VET-120 Diagnostic Imaging. Course Set-up. 5 Lessons (Webinars) 5 Lesson Exams Final Proctored Exam Required Reading Diagnostic Imaging Study Guide Radiography in Veterinary Technology (Lavin – 4 th edition). Studying for Exams. Make copy of Lesson PowerPoints

Télécharger la présentation

VET-120 Diagnostic Imaging

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. VET-120Diagnostic Imaging

  2. Course Set-up • 5 Lessons (Webinars) • 5 Lesson Exams • Final Proctored Exam • Required Reading • Diagnostic Imaging Study Guide • Radiography in Veterinary Technology (Lavin – 4th edition)

  3. Studying for Exams • Make copy of Lesson PowerPoints • Take excellent notes during Webinars • Read & highlight Assigned Readings in Study Guide & Lavin book • Perform Self Checks in Study Guide • Learn the Glossaryat the beginning of each Chapter in Lavin book • Study Key Points & Review Questionsat end of each Chapter in Lavin book

  4. Lesson 2– Producing a Radiographic Image

  5. Glossary Terms – Page 36

  6. The 4 Exposure Factors Milliamperage (mA) Time (S) Kilovoltage (kVp) Distance (SID)

  7. The 4 Exposure Factors • Exposure factors are THE KEY to taking good quality diagnostic x-rays • Definition • Machine settings that a technician can adjust on the machine to take diagnostic x-rays • SIBKIS when it comes to changing exposure factors! 

  8. Milliamperage (mA)Figure 4-1, Page 36 • Amount of electrons to produce x-rays • Fundamental – Use the highest mA your machine can do • Allows you to use much lower time settings • Less exposure time to x-rays • The higher the mA, the more exposed your film will be (the DARKER it will be) if all other exposure factors are kept the same

  9. Exposure Time (S) • The longer the exposure time, the greater the number of x-rays produced • The longer the exposure time, the greater the exposure to scatter radiation • Inverse relationship to mA • Benefits of shorter exposure times • Less movement on x-ray (thoracic films) • Technician safety

  10. Kilovoltage Peak (kVp)Figure 4-4, Page 38 • Speed of electrons used to create x-rays • Quality of x-ray • Not faster x-rays, but more penetrating • Affects both exposure (darkness) of film, and contrast of film • Santes’ Rule • (2 X thickness of body part) + 40 = kVp

  11. CalipersFigure 4-5, Page 38 • Definition • A tool used to measure the thickness of a body part to be x-rayed • Use centimeters (cm), not inches • If in between numbers…… latitude

  12. Latitude

  13. Kilovoltage Summary • It affects both contrast and exposure • Increased kVp  more penetrating x-rays • Increased kVp  increased scatter radiation • Increased kVp  decreased contrast (leading to more latitude)

  14. Milliamperage and Time • Milliamperes • Exposure time • Formula • mAs = mA X s • Examples – same mAs, different mA • Same darkness(exposure)

  15. Distance (SID) • Source-image distance(SID) • Aka Focal-film distance(FFD) • Should be 40 inches for both table top technique and grid technique • Inverse Square Law – • Figure 4-6, Page 39 • Definition • KISS Fundamental – distance should always stay constant if possible

  16. Greater Distance = Less Shadows

  17. Greater Distance = Less Intensity (Exposure)Figure 4-6, Page 39

  18. Review of X-ray Production • Figure 4-7on page 40 • X-ray tube parts • Primary vs. secondary radiation • Exposure factors

  19. Radiographic Quality

  20. Glossary Terms – Page 44

  21. Radiographic Quality • Definition • How easily details can be seen on an x-ray • How sharp the details are

  22. Radiographic Quality Factors Radiographic Density Radiographic Contrast Exposure Factors Scatter Radiation Grids

  23. Radiographic Density • Definition – amount of darkness (exposure) in x-ray film • When looking at a film for exposure, look at the body part you are interested in • What causes density, you ask?  ---

  24. Densities of Various Structures Subject densities: 1, Air. 2, Fat. 3, Water. 4, Bone. 5, Metal. Air is least dense, allowing x-rays to penetrate and expose the film. Metal is the most dense, absorbing most of the x-rays and allowing only a few to penetrate, exposing the film.

  25. Factors Affecting Radiographic Density • All 4 exposure factors • Figure 5-2 on page 46 • Same mAs (exposure), different thickness of body part • White structures on x-rays • Radio-opaque….. Why? • Black structures on x-rays • Radio-translucent….. Why?

  26. Density on X-raysFigure 5-3, Page 47

  27. Subject Density/Exposure

  28. How is the Exposure on This X-ray? • “Overexposed” (Figure 5-7 on page 49) • Body parts too dark • Why? • “Under-exposed” (Figure 5-6 on page 48) • Body parts too light • More common than overexposed • Correct exposure (“just right”!)

  29. Overexposed Film (Too Dark)

  30. Underexposed Film(Too Light)

  31. “Just Right, Goldilocks!” 

  32. Underexposed or Overexposed?

  33. Underexposed or Overexposed?

  34. Underexposed or Overexposed?

  35. Radiographic Contrast • Definition • The density differences between 2 adjacent areas of an x-ray • High contrast (short scale) • Low contrast (long scale) • Just like exposure, look at body parts (not background) on film

  36. High Contrast vs. Low Contrast Table 5-1, Page 46

  37. High Contrast X-rays • Lots of black and white on the film with very little shades of gray • Bone x-rays should be high contrast

  38. Low Contrast X-rays • The film has black, white, and lots of shades of gray in between • Usually soft tissue x-rays • Latitude

  39. Factors Affecting Radiographic Contrast • kVp • Relationship of contrast and kVp (Table 5-1 on page 46)*** • Latitude • Subject contrast • Difference in density between 2 body parts • Depends on thickness & density of part (Table 5-2 on page 46)

More Related