Neuroradiology Flashcards

1
Q

X ray:

is air white or black
what colour is soft tissue

what colour are bone

A

Air- Black
Soft tissue- grey

Bones- WHITE

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2
Q

CT:

what colour is bone
what colour is CSF
what colour is air
what colour is soft tissue
what colour is metal
A
Bones - White (white circle of skull bone)
CSF - Black
Air- Black
Soft tissue - Grey
Metal - White starburst effect
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3
Q

MRI:

what colour is CSF
what colour is skull bone

A

CSF- White

skull bone -Thin black circle surrounded by white circle of fat

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4
Q

Indications of a CT (5)

A

1- Head trauma
2- Acute stroke
3- Headache: SIGN guidelines, red flags for suspected tumour or subarachnoid haemorrhage
4- Cancer: looking for metastatic brain tumours in patients with symptoms
5- Post-surgical: hydrocephalus, haemorrhage

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5
Q

Contraindications of CT

A

Minor head trauma exclusion criteria - NICE/SIGN guidelines

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6
Q

Indications of MRI (7)

A

1- Demyelination – e.g. MS
2- CNS tumours
3- Spine – for intervertebral disc prolapse
4- Transient ischaemic attacks
5- Epilepsy
6- Paediatric neurology – developmental disorders, congenital malformations
7- Headache

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7
Q

Contraindications of MRI (4)

A

1- Implanted electronics - pacemaker, cochlear implant

2- Moveable metallic implants - aneurysm clips, heart valves

3- Claustrophobia

4- Pregnancy

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8
Q

What can angiography be used to diagnose in neuro pathology

A

1- Aneurysm
2- Arteriovenous malformation (AVM)
3- Carotidocavernous fistula
4- Unstoppable epistaxis

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9
Q

What are CT perfusion scans used for (2)

A

Stroke

Tumours

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10
Q

Is there increased or decreased perfusion in…

  • someone with a stroke
  • someone with a tumour
A

Decreased

Increased - indicating angiogenesis

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11
Q

What is a PET scan essentially done to see

A

To map out glucose usage

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12
Q

When are PET scans used (3)

A

Tumours
Inflammation
Infection

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13
Q

Plain x rays

  • advantages (3)
  • disadvantages (1)
A

Universal availability
Fast
Sequential image

Lacks soft tissue detail

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14
Q

Ultrasound

  • advantages (2)
  • disadvantages (2)
A

No ionising radiation
Less expensive equipment
Can be performed bedside

Requires wide enough open fontanelle
Image quality and interpretation requires skilful experience

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15
Q

CT

  • advantages (3)
  • disadvantages (3)
A

Rapid
Metal and pacemaker tolerant
Good for acute haemorrhage/ skull fractures

Uses radiation
More expensive
Not mobile/portable

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16
Q

Radionuclide radiology radioactive substances attached to other molecules) – e.g. PET, SPECT

  • advantages (3)
  • disadvantages (3)
A

To see glucose metabolism
To see perfusion
To see dopamine reuptake receptors

Unclear anatomy
Medium cost
Radiotracers can be expensive

17
Q

MRI

  • advantages (3)
  • disadvantages (4)
A

No ionising radiation
Good at differentiating soft tissue
Good at viewing physiological info, e.g. blood flow

Poor metalwork tolerance – danger of metal becoming projectiles
Sensitive to magnet
No pacemakers or cochlear implants allowed
Least movement tolerance
Most expensive