Interventional procedures Flashcards

1
Q

needle gauge

A

-the smaller the gauge number the bigger the needle core (opening)/ the bigger the gauge number the smaller the needle core

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2
Q

cyst aspiration

A

-cystic lesions that have thick walls and other suspicious features
-symptom relief
-eliminate mammographic masses
-cytology fluid evaluated only if color is suspicious (if not, discarded in sharps container)

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3
Q

abscess drainage

A

-pt with an infection fluid collection that is not responding to antibiotic treatment (may have to be repeated)

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4
Q

fine needle aspiration (FNA)

A

-local anesthetic applied
-fine needle (18-25 gauge) used to aspirate cell
-cytotechnologist preps sample and places cell on a glass slide (multiple passes may be needed)
-U/S guided FNA done on irregular lymph nodes with thickened cortex
-yields CYTOLOGIC evaluation of CELLS

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5
Q

FNA advantages

A

-less invasive than core biopsy
-local anesthesia may be used
-safe, minimal complications
-usually on lymph nodes breast/axilla
-results in <1-2 hrs

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6
Q

FNA disadvantages

A

-possible false neg. b/c of small sample size
-cytologic eval doesn’t differentiate in situ from invasive cancers
-not used for sampling microcalcifications

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7
Q

Ultrasound core biopsy

A

-US guidance only
-solid lesions with other suspicious features
-lesions near chest wall
-pts with bleeding or clotting disorders where vacuum assistance may be contraindicated (not recommended)

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8
Q

US core biopsy technique

A

-14-16 gauge core biopsy needle in a spring loaded design with a trough
-3-5 passes (US used to guide)

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9
Q

core biopsy advantages

A

-less invasive than open surgical biopsy
-small incision and local anesthetic
-sample volume is sufficient for HISTOLOGIC (tissue) eval

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10
Q

core biopsy disadvantages

A

-risk of bleeding, infection or hematoma
-dense lesions are difficult to sample
-histologic analysis usually req. a min. of 24 hrs

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11
Q

vacuum-assisted core biopsy (VAAB
vacuum-assisted breast biopsy (VABB)

A

-Indications;
-solid lesions with other suspicious features should be biopsied
-7-14 gauge automated sampling system
-after local anesthesia, 1/4 in. skin incision made
-needle enters lesion once, sampling notch is rotated
-common type of image guided biopsy; stereotactic, US, MR, and Tomo

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12
Q

Vacuum assisted core biopsy stereotactic guidance used for what?

A

suspicious calcification

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13
Q

vacuum assisted core biopsy advantages

A

-less invasive than surgical bx, local anesthetic
-greater accuracy sampling dense masses
-vacuum assisted- one needle pass
-small lesions may be completely excised
-HISTOLOGIC (tissue) samples
-less cost

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14
Q

vacuum assisted core biopsy disadvantages

A

-greater risk of bleeding, infection, hematoma, or other complications
-healthy tissue may be compromised

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15
Q

clip placement

A

-can be placed after US, MR, stereotactic, or DBT breast biopsy
-safe, minimal complication

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16
Q

why do we do clip placement?

A

-necessary to place clip during biopsies in order to continue surveillance of the area on images on the pt in years following
-if area needs to be surgically removed, then clip will be removed too

17
Q

post procedure imaging views to verify clip placement

A

-breast; CC, MLO
-axilla; AT, AP shoulder

18
Q

wire localization (needle localization) indications

A

-placement of percutaneous needle wire for pre-operative guidance in locating;
-biopsy proven breast cancer or high-risk lesion
-non-palpable breast lesion
-wire guides surgeon to the mass (can be done w/ US or mammo)

19
Q

post procedure mammogram
wire localization

A

-after wire localization, CC & ML or MLO are taken to assess wire placement
-following localization using a hook wire, pt is taken to surgery
-surgeon removes wire along with surrounding breast tissue

20
Q

specimen radiography

A

-xray of specimen is taken to assure that the area of interest and/or clip is in the excised tissue
-specimen sent to pathology lab for examination and interpretation

21
Q

seed placement

A

-wire free breast localization system
-size of a grain of rice
-non-radioactive; magseed SAVI SCOUT
-radioactive; I125 seed

22
Q

post procedure imaging
verify seed placement

A

-breast; CC, ML
-axilla; AT, AP shoulder

23
Q

OSHA

A

occupational safety and health administration created in 1970

24
Q

biohazardous waste (medical waste)

A

waste that has risk of carrying infectious diseases (needles, glass, blades)

25
Q

infectious material

A

human bodily fluids, blood or unfixed tissue (to the body)

26
Q

universal precautions

A

an approach to infection control to treat all human blood and certain human body fluids as if they were known to be infectious for HIV, HBV, and other bloodborne pathogens