Imaging of circulatory disturbances Flashcards

1
Q

types of anatomical vascular imaging

A

plain radiographs, catheter angiography, ultrasound, CT/MRI

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2
Q

types of functional vascular imaging

A

radionuclide imaging, MRI functional imaging, ultrasound

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3
Q

catheter angiography

A

vessel punctured and catheterised, sterile procedure, contrast injected using pump injector, rapid series of image acquisition

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4
Q

challenges with vascular imaging

A

soft tissue contrast- can’t see important structures very well eg blood vessels, lumen of hollow viscera, functional significance of lesions, is treatment effective?

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5
Q

when is vascular mapping useful

A

prior to intervention eg planning of aortic aneurysm repair, planning of lower limb arterial stenting/ bypass, prior to removal of living donor kidney. avoids cutting into wrong thing

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6
Q

limitations of CT

A

won’t identify any small volume leaks, snapshot images so cannot exclude intermittent bleeding, can’t always differentiate between acute and chronic thrombosis, can be difficult to convey anatomy to non radiologists

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7
Q

how do you visualise the vessels

A

IV contrast eg high density (iodine)

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8
Q

problems with iodinated contrast

A

major allergic reactions, renal dysfunction, disturbance of thyroid metabolism, disturbance of clotting mechanism, seizures, PO, discomfort feels like peeing themselves, nausea (rare), metallic taste

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9
Q

important considerations before using iodine contrast

A

asthma/atopy, previous contrast allergies, poor renal function, metformin- medication for diabetes

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10
Q

contrast reaction rates

A

no history 1 in 10,000 other allergy 1 in 1000 death 1 in 40,000 asthma 2 in 1000

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11
Q

most common ultrasound mode

A

B mode/ brightness mode/ 2D mode

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12
Q

other modes on ultrasound used for

A

M mode/ motion mode. used to assess heart valve movement as well as chamber dimension and function

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13
Q

what does red doppler imaging mean

A

shows direction of flow, flow in vessel is away from the probe. blue means towards

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14
Q

doppler imaging used most commonly for

A

detection of DVT

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15
Q

ultrasound contrast used for

A

characterising lesions, assessment of organ perfusion, delineating organ edge, alternative to Ct or MRI if unable to tolerate other forms of contrast. they are micro bubbles

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16
Q

spiral CT

A

enables acquisition in single breath hold, less motion artefact better coordination with IV contrast, quicker, multiplanar images

17
Q

windowing

A

changes shade of pixels to make it easier for human eye to see. window level refers to the CT unit assigned as the midpoint of the scale