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RADIOLOGY

RADIOLOGY. Or, Why do you want to x ray my cat?. Let’s start with the basics. How does this stuff work anyway? Is it magic? . The Electromagnetic Spectrum. Radio: Radio stations transmit music on radio waves. Radio waves are also emitted by stars and gases in space.

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RADIOLOGY

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  1. RADIOLOGY Or, Why do you want to x ray my cat?

  2. Let’s start with the basics. How does this stuff work anyway? Is it magic?

  3. The Electromagnetic Spectrum Radio: Radio stations transmit music on radio waves. Radio waves are also emitted by stars and gases in space. Microwave: Microwaves cook your popcorn, but are also used by astronomers to learn about the structure of nearby galaxies. Infrared: Night vision goggles pick up infrared light from objects with heat. In space, infrared light helps us map the dust between stars. Visible: Our eyes detect visible light. Fireflies, light bulbs, and stars all emit visible light. Ultraviolet: Ultraviolet radiation is emitted by the Sun and is the reason skin tans and burns. X-ray: The veterinarian uses X-rays to image your pet, and airport security uses them to see through your bag (and your clothes). Gamma ray: Doctors use gamma-ray imaging to see inside your body. The biggest gamma-ray generator of all is the Universe.

  4. So who started this? Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (27 March 1845 – 10 February 1923) was a German physicist, who, on 8 November 1895, produced and detected electromagnetic radiation in a wavelength range today known as X-rays or Röntgen rays, an achievement that earned him the first Nobel Prize in Physics in 1901.

  5. The first radiographic image ever was of Röntgen’s wife’s left hand, clearly showing her wedding ring.

  6. How do we get an image? The heart of an X-ray generator is the X-ray tube. The X-ray tube contains a cathode, which directs a stream of electrons into a vacuum, and an anode, which collects the electrons and evacuates the heat generated. When the electrons hit the target, about 1% of the resulting energy is emitted as X-rays, the remaining 99% released as heat.

  7. Densities Air Fat Soft tissue Bone Metal

  8. How many densities can you see?

  9. Analog vs. CR Radiography Analog is traditional film x rays. Much like photography, film is exposed to light to make an image. In radiography, the film is held between two screens in a cassette. The screens emit light when exposed to x rays and an image of whatever is between the x ray generator (i.e. your cat) and the cassette is captured. The film is developed with chemicals like traditional black and white film.

  10. C(omputed) R(adiography) With CR systems, the film, intensifying screen, and cassette used in analog systems are replaced with an imaging plate. The plate has a similar look and feel to a traditional film cassette. With CR, the feel of acquiring an image is similar to analog. As with film, the CR cassette is placed and an exposure is made. The cassette is then loaded into an imaging reader. Inside the reader, the plate is exposed to lasers that interpret the information on the plate and translate it into a radiographic image. The imaging plate is then erased by white light inside the imaging reader and is ready to use again.

  11. So why do I need an x ray?

  12. It’s not just about bones.

  13. Sometimes it is…

  14. Sometimes it isn’t…

  15. Don’t let your cat play with hair ties (or string, or rubber bands, or silk flowers, or…)

  16. What else can radiographs show us? Radiographic images can tell the veterinarian a lot about your cat’s health. By comparing body structures to known normals, much can be learned about what’s going on inside your cat.

  17. Normal Cat Abdomen

  18. What’s wrong with this picture?

  19. A word about radiation safety

  20. Radiation is everywhere • We live in a radiation filled environment. Cosmic rays bombard us from outer space, radon is present in our homes, and radionuclides in the stone constructing our buildings and even the food we eat give off radiation. On average, we can get 360mrem of radiation a year just from living on earth.

  21. Time, Distance, Shielding The principle of ALARA is designed to help radiology technicians and their patients to keep their radiation exposure As Low As Reasonably Achievable. This is achieved by keeping exposure times as short as possible, keeping as far away from the source as possible and wearing lead protective equipment to shield themselves.

  22. The End

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