LEC 22 - Equine Radiology Intro Flashcards

1
Q

When is ultrasound used in horse imaging of legs?

A

Therapy - joint injections

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2
Q

What is the MRI the best for looking at?

A

The hoof, or soft tissue damage

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3
Q

When is radiology used in a lameness case?

A

Once lameness is localized to a specific region. most useful for bones and joints.

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4
Q

How much change in bone must be present before you can see it on x-ray?

A

40% at least. Which is why there is a latent period with stress fractures.

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5
Q

What can be seen in legs when you use contrast for radiographs?

A

Soft tissue and synovial structures. Can see if there is a leak in the bursa.

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6
Q

What type of view is MOST important when taking radiographs?

A

Orthogonal views. at right angles, Oblique views as well.

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7
Q

What does the radiological view describe?

A

Point of entrance to point of exit of x-ray beam

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8
Q

What are the four major radiographic views taken?

A

Lateral-medial, Dorso-plantar, DLPMO, and DMPLO

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9
Q

With orthogonal views how much of the bone can be seen?

A

~ 50% of their surface

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10
Q

How do you make an orthogonal view look at 100% of the bones surface?

A

Take oblique views at a 45 degree angle to the dorsal aspect of the limb.

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11
Q

Where should the marker always be placed on a radiograph?

A

Lateral side of the limb

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12
Q

What is a ultrasonography?

A

2D multi-planar imaging technique based on passage of sound waves and principles of sound-tissue interaction

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13
Q

What is U/S a primary modality for?

A

Soft tissue structure (but also used to determine bone remodeling and ligamentous insertion sites on the bone)

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14
Q

What functional assessments can you get out of U/S?

A

Doppler and elastography for tendons and ligaments

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15
Q

What does U/S doppler tell you?

A

Blood flow

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16
Q

What does an elastography tell you?

A

Tissue strain

17
Q

What compound is important for MRI’s to make an image?

A

Hydrogen

18
Q

How does an MRI produce an image?

A

Exciting hydrogen nuclei at a specific radiofrequency within magnetic field. Then it detects the energy released by the nuclei as they relax.

19
Q

How are MRI’s carried out on a horse?

A

Standing or under general anesthesia

20
Q

What is MRI the gold standard for?

A

Seeing soft tissue structures within the hoof

21
Q

What pathologies is MRI really good at finding?

A

Occult fractures, articular cartilage damage, and subchondral bone remodeling

22
Q

If you see a brightness or increased amount of white on an U/S of a joint what could it mean?

A

Fluid signal - edema or inflammation

23
Q

Why is CT better then radiographs?

A

No superimposition

24
Q

What is CT good for?

A

Pre-operative planning for fracture repair or molar extraction. Can make a 3D recoonstruction of the image.

25
Q

How does a nuclear scintigraphy work?

A

Radionucleotide coupled with diphosphate carrier injected IV. Thought to bind to exposed hydroxyapatite crystals in areas of bone remodeling or soft tissue mineralization. Emit gamma radiation.

26
Q

What three phases can be used for nuclear scintigraphy?

A

Vascular, soft tissue, and bone

27
Q

When is vascular N/S taken?

A

Immediately after injection

28
Q

When is soft tissue N/S taken?

A

30 to 60 minutes after injection, have to pick a region and shoot there only because it leaves soft tissue so quickly.

29
Q

When is bone N/S taken?

A

~ 90 minutes after injection

30
Q

When is a N/S bone scan most likely done?

A

Obscure lameness or multiple limb lameness. When a radiograph shows no issues but horse is obviously lame.

31
Q

What state does the horse have to be in for N/S?

A

Standing sedation (don’t want patient to move)

32
Q

What is important to know about the N/S technique when it comes to safety?

A

The drug is metabolized in the kidney so urine will be contaminated with radiation. Will need to be in a special stall for about 24 to 36 hours.

33
Q

What can thermography be used for?

A

Detect inflammation or vascular damage of the limbs

34
Q

What can effect a thermograph reading?

A

Environmental temperature, air flow, length of horse hair, previous bandaging, etc.