Equine URT Radiography Flashcards

1
Q

What are some considerations for radiography of the equine head?

A
  • Equine head can be imaged with most radiography equipment
  • Horizontal beam - safety precautions
  • Use of plate holders, lead gloves and gowns
  • Use inverse square law - if restraining horse, stand as far away as possible
  • Sedation to reduce head movement
  • Head support
  • Rope head collars to minimise artefacts
  • Can use grid for laterolateral and DV views
  • Markers for left / right and to mark position on horse
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2
Q

What views can you use to radiograph the equine URT?

A
  • Lateral (latero-lateral) views used most frequently
  • 30o obliques used for dental arcades
  • Dorsoventral, ventrodorsal, lesion orientated obliques and intraoral views also possible
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3
Q

What regions can be imaged for equine URT?

A
  • Cranium
  • Sinuses
  • Teeth
  • Guttural pouch
  • Pharynx and larynx
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4
Q

What are oblique views used for?

A
  • Oblique views used to image the tooth roots
  • Lateral views superimpose the left and right dental arcades over each other
  • 30o obliques of the mandible or maxilla separate the two arcades
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5
Q

Label where the arrows are on this equine skull and also label the mandible and facial crest

A
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6
Q

What might you be able to identify with radiography of the cranium?

A
  • Fractures - changes in alignment, gas within soft tissues, fluid within sinuses
  • Suturitis - benign bony proliferation
  • Osteomyelitis - bone lysis and aggressive periosteal new bone
  • Cysts / neoplasia- can be benign and lytic, or aggressive lesions
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7
Q

Label the numbers here of this normal radiograph of a horses head

A

1 nasoincisive notch

2 nasal bone

3 frontal bone

4 orbit and ethmoturbinates

5 infraorbital canal

6 frontal sinus

7 rostral maxilllary sinus

8 caudal maxillary sinus

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8
Q

How do sinuses differ in radiographs with age?

A

•Age differences - young horse has a long reserve crown of the teeth projecting into sinus. Old horse has a short reserve crown, most of sinus is visible.

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9
Q

What are standard radiographic views of the sinuses?

A

•lateral and VD

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10
Q

What abnormalities can radiographs of sinuses show?

A
  • Standard radiographic views: lateral and VD
  • Radiography with the horse standing
  • produces horizontal fluid lines on lateral view
  • Have head vertical
  • VD useful to determine side of lesion
  • Normal sinuses are gas filled and radiopaque
  • Changes in shape - facial distortion with sinus cysts and fractures, lysis and new bone with infection or neoplasia
  • Changes in radiopacity - fluid lines from blood or pus, soft tissue masses
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11
Q

Label the numbers

A

1 nasoincisive notch

2 frontal sinus

3 orbit

4 ethmoturbinate

5 infraorbital canal

6 septum between rostral and caudal maxillary sinuses

7 teeth

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12
Q

What views can you take when radiographing the dental arcades?

A
  • Lateral
  • VD
  • 30o obliques
  • Intraoral views
  • Dentine is most radiopaque tissue in body - requires higher radiographic exposure
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13
Q

What radiographic changes can you see with dental disease?

A
  • Abnormal conformation (brachygnathia, prognathia)
  • Extra or missing teeth
  • Fractures
  • Infection
  • Dentigerous cysts
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14
Q

What radiographic changes with the dental arcades are there with apical infection?

A
  • ‘Halo’ formation - bone lysis and endosteitis
  • Cementosis
  • Discharging sinus tracts through bone
  • Coral formation (metaplastic calcification)
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15
Q

What does the guttural pouch normally look like on radiograph?

What is a standard view for GP and pharyngeal region?

A
  • Normal findings - see guttural pouch and pharynx lectures
  • Guttural pouch normally air filled
  • Standard view is lateromedial
  • Ventrodorsal or dorsoventral views may be used
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16
Q

Label the image here of a radiograph of the GP and pharyngeal region

A
17
Q

Label the following image of a radiograph of the GP and pharyngeal region

A