Lecture One: X-ray, CT, PET Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four main techniques of functional and anatomical brain imaging?

A

Radiography and X-ray angiography
CT
PET
MRI

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2
Q

Describe the physical basis of x-ray;

A

Absorption of x-ray by tissues

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3
Q

Describe the x-ray procedure;

A
  • Broad beam of x-rays pass through head onto x-ray film

- Results in projection (2D, shadow) image of the 3D object

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4
Q

How does the X-ray image relate to structure;

A
  • Intensity is in proportion to absorption pf x-rays

i. e white = dense

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5
Q

How do angiograms, a form of x-ray differ from usual?

A

They use a contrast agent typical iodine which is injected intravascularly and it has a high attenuation co-efficient.

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6
Q

What does attenuation describe in terms of x-rays?

A

How well it is penetrated by light or in this instance x-rays

Therefore bone has high attenuation but soft tissue does not.

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7
Q

What are the uses of x-rays?

A
  • Skull fractures, bone abnormalities (bone tumours)

- Symmetry of structures can be observed

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8
Q

What do angiograms show?

A

Angiograms show aneurisms, vascular defects i.e occlusive strokes

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9
Q

What is the advantages of plain film x-ray?

A
  • Very high spatial resolution (0.05mm)

- Good depiction of the skull (fractures tumours)

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10
Q

What are the disadvantages of x-rays?

A
  • Projection images only
  • Poor intrinsic tissue contrast
  • Use of ionising radiation
  • Some risk associated with injection of contrast
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11
Q

What is CT?

A

The use of X-ray imaging but in many planes to create a 3D image and then create slices.

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12
Q

Whats the physical basis of CT?

A

The absorption of x-rays by tissue

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13
Q

Describe the procedure of CT;

A
  • Narrow x-ray beams are projected through the head onto detectors
  • The source is rotated about the head to aquire many projections
  • A 2D image of the slice is reconstructed using filtered back projections
  • An adjacent slice is imaged building up a 3D image
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14
Q

What are the uses of CT?

A

Tumours, strokes, anatomical defects

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15
Q

What are the advantages of CT?

A
  • Tomographic (sliced bread)
  • Can resolve grey and white matter, blood, CSF
  • High resolution (0.5mm)
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16
Q

What are the disadvantages of CT?

A
  • Use of ionising radiation
  • Some risk associated with injection of contrast (cancer)
  • Anatomical images only (no function)
17
Q

Describe filtered back projection;

A

Technique used to generate the accurate 2D image and later 3D.

  • Filter increases the resolution of the image
18
Q

Whats PET?

A

The use of gamma rays produced by radioactive decay to detect function

19
Q

Describe the physical basis of PET;

A

Physical basis;

  • Radioactive isotopes of certain elements (CNOF) can be substituted into biologically important compounds (i.e glucose)
  • Decay of these atoms release positrons
  • Positrons collide with electrons and undergo an antimatter reaction to release two gamma rays 180 degrees apart
  • Detection of gamma rays indicates position of labelled molecules
20
Q

Describe the procedure of PET;

A
  • Isotope labelled compounds are injected or inhaled.
  • i.e 2DG is taken up by neurons and phosphorylated preventing further metabolism, building up in the cell.
  • Gamma rays can be detected by an array of crystal photomultipliers
  • Images of activity are reconstructed using tomographic techniques
21
Q

What are the uses of PET?

A
  • Glucose imaging of metabolism
  • Blood flow imaging using labelled water (blood flow is good indicator of function)
  • Image subtraction can highlight are associated with specific tasks
22
Q

What is image subtraction?

A

The process whereby you take an image of a brain at rest and subtract this activity from the active image to highlight the areas active for a specific task done in the active image.

23
Q

What are the advantages of PET?

A
  • Brain function can be imaged

- Also distribution of receptors (e.g dopamine), blood flow, using labelled water

24
Q

What are the disadvantages of PET?

A
  • Anatomical images not obtained

- Poor resolution 4-8mm (because positron can move some distance before striking electron)

25
Q

Whats a composite image?

A

An image generated from two imaging techniques i.e CT and PET

26
Q

What is effective dose?

A

The description of the radiation received per an imaging tehcnique.

i.e

  • Tissue dependant
  • X ray = 0.05 mSv
  • Ct = 5-20 mSv
  • PET/CT = 25 mSv
27
Q

What is an mSv;

A

Millisieverts, describes the probability of getting cancer from radiation exposure

1Sv = 5% chance