Neuro Radiology Flashcards

1
Q

Advantages of CT over MRI

A
  • Fast
  • Widely available
  • Portable at some institutions
  • Opportunity for multiplanar reformating (axial, saggital)
  • Inexpensive
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2
Q

On CT, gray matter appears ___ relative to white matter.

A

On CT, gray matter appears brighter relative to white matter.

Because it is more dense!

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3
Q

Uses of head CT

A
  • In trauma
  • To rule in or out intracranial hemorrhage
  • Rule in or out bone fracture
  • To identify calcifications
  • Serial evaluation of inpatients
  • CT angiography may be performed to assess for thrombotic or thromboembolic stroke or for aneurysm
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4
Q

Limitations of CT

A
  • Radiation exposure
  • Relatively insensitive for ischemic stroke in first 6 hours
  • Evaluation of posterior fossa is limited on CT due to artifacts in this area
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5
Q

Advantages of MRI over CT

A
  • No radiation (much safer for pediatrics!)
  • Multiplanar capability
  • Exquisite detail of brain anatomy
  • Superior for evaluation of the brain parenchyma
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6
Q

Uses of head MRI

A
  • Best for acute infarction with diffusion-weighted imaging
  • Best for visualizing brain tumors and differentiating them from cysts
  • Useful in subacute to chronic hemorrhage
  • Better than CT for evaluating the posterior fossa and brainstem
  • MR angiogram can be used to assess vascular anatomy
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7
Q

Limitations of MRI

A
  • Claustrophobia
  • Takes a long time
  • Patient motion causes artifacts
  • Bone lesions not visualized well
  • Metal may be a safety hazard
  • Much more expensive than CT
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8
Q

Fundamentally, a CT scan is basically. . .

A

. . . a fancy X-ray that uses digitalized information and reconstruction instead of direct analog imaging

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9
Q

Phases of a CT

A
  • Scanning phase
  • Reconstruction phase
  • Digital-to-analog conversion phase
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10
Q

Fundamentally, an MRI scan is basically. . .

A

. . . a big nuclear magnetic resonance chamber that uses a strong magnetic field to create differences in the rotational states of protons. Radio-frequency light is then fired at these protons and data is acquired from the light absorbed vs bounced back, and based on the exact frequency of the light used.

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11
Q

On T1-weighted MRI. . .

A

. . . the fat appears bright and the fluid appears dark

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12
Q

On T2-weighted MRI. . .

A

. . . the fluid appears bright

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13
Q

Most brain lesions are ___ on T1-weighted imaging and ___ on T2-weighted imaging.

A

Most brain lesions are dark on T1-weighted imaging and bright on T2-weighted imaging.

For both cases, this is because edema is ubiquitous in these lesions, and edema is essentially just an increased density of fluid.

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14
Q

Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) imaging

A

A T2 weighted sequence MRI with suppression of water signal from the CSF.

Helps to see more subtle anatomical abnormalities. Appears more similar to a T1.

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15
Q

___ is best in the evaluation of acute ischemic stroke

A

Diffusion-weighted MRI is best in the evaluation of acute ischemic stroke

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