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INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of...

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INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College
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Page 1: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGINGOksana H. Baltarowich, MD

Professor Radiology

Department of Radiology

Jefferson Medical College

Page 2: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

NO DISCLOSURES

Page 3: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Objectives

• List the main diagnostic imaging modalities used in medical practice

• Explain the basic principles of the main types of imaging modalities

• Describe advantages of the different imaging techniques

• List disadvantages of the different imaging techniques

Page 4: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Medical Imaging

X-Rays: ionizing radiationRadiographyCT scan (Computed Tomography)

Gamma raysNuclear Medicine

Sound wavesUltrasound

Magnetic fields/radiofrequency wavesMRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)

Page 5: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Who Does Imaging?

• Radiologist– Consultant: Diagnostic, Subspecialties– Interventionalist

• Radiation Oncologist: Treatment planning• Cardiologist: Invasive, Non-Invasive• Vascular Surgeon: Endovascular procedures• Other specialists

– Usually for procedure guidance (Ob-Gyn, Internal medicine, Orthopedics, etc.)

Page 6: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Training

• Radiologist– Mandatory clinical internship– 4 years general radiology residency– Physics, radiation protection, radiobiology,

technology, diagnosis, anatomy, pathology, physiology, etc.

– 1 year fellowship in subspecialty

• Cardiologist, vascular surgeon, others– intergrated into training program

Page 7: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Radiography

X-rays

Page 8: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

X-rays

• Dr. Wilhelm C. Roentgen at University of Wurzburg, 1895– Discovered and

named X-rays• Awarded first Nobel

Prize for Physics in 1901

Page 9: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

X-Rays• Radiography

– Plain film radiography - without added contrast material

– Contrast radiography – with contrast material

– Computed Radiography (CR)– Fluoroscopy: done in real time

• Barium studies: Upper GI, BE• Angiography

• CT (Computed Tomography), aka CAT scans (Computer Assisted Tomography)

Page 10: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Radiographs• Electromagnetic waves (X-rays) are produced in an

X-ray tube by converting electrical energy into an electromagnetic wave• Electrons are accelerated from an electrically

negative cathode to a positive target anode• Energy is released and converted into heat and

X-rays

Page 11: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Radiographs• Images produced by electromagnetic waves

(X-rays)• produced by an X-ray tube• pass thru the body• are absorbed by the different tissues• reach the film and • expose the film

Radiographic cassette

Page 12: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Computed Radiography (CR)

• Produces digital radiographic images• Instead of film, a phosphor plate is exposed

to X-rays• Laser beam scans the plate• Light is released, intensified and converted to

electron stream• Converted by computer into digital image• Viewed on a monitor• Transferred over networks

Page 13: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Radiographic Densities

• Air Black• Fat Dark

gray• Water* Light

gray• Bone White

• Calcium White• Metal Very white*Water=soft tissue: organs, muscles, blood vessels, masses

Page 14: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Radiodensity

Radiodensity is a function of:

1. Composition (atomic number)

2. Thickness of object

3. Strength of X-ray

Radiodensity as function of thickness of object

Radiolucencyis the opposite

Page 15: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Radiodensity• If an object is thick and dense, less radiation

passes thru to reach the film– Radiodense– Film is underexposed and stays light

• Air gives no obstruction to X-rays – Radiolucent– Film gets overexposed and turns black

• Bone absorbs radiation, less radiation reaches the film– Film is underexposed and stays white

Page 16: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Abdominal Radiograph: KUB

• Air Black• Fat Dark

gray• Water Light

gray• Bone White

• Calcium White• Metal Very white

*Water=soft tissue: organs, muscles, blood vessels, masses

Page 17: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Radiographs

Composed of overlapping radiodensities, overlapping shadows

Tissues stacked in front of each other

Need 90 degree projection for anatomic placement

Page 18: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

RadiographsPerpendicular projections are necessary to

localize structures in the body

Page 19: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Roof fell on patient

Page 20: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Patient Position for Chest X-Ray

Posteroanterior (PA) Chest: X-ray beam passes from posterior to anterior

RT LT

Page 21: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Erect Position

Free intraabdominal air: Pneumoperitoneum

Page 22: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Portable Films

• Patient is too ill to go to Radiology Department

• Less optimal• Portable X-ray unit • X-ray film is behind

patient • X-rays pass through

patient from anterior to posterior

Page 23: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Abdominal Radiographs

• Erect/upright• Supine• Prone• Decubitus• Oblique/rotated

Page 24: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Contrast Radiography• Injection, ingestion or placement of radiopaque material into the

body for contrast enhancement• Oral, rectal contrast: Barium, gastrograffin

Page 26: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Caution: Radiation Exposure

• Radiation workers follow safety guidelines

• Women of child-bearing age should be questioned about possibility of pregnancy before abdominal X-ray.

• Ask about LMP and check pregnancy test, if in doubt.

Page 27: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Caution: Pregnancy

Page 28: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Computed TomographyX-rays

Page 29: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Computed Tomography• Ionizing radiation used to obtain cross-sectional

images of the body• Table moves through large donut-shaped scanner

– Fast moving X-ray tube (thin X-ray beam rotates)– Numerous electronic detectors

• Rapid acquisition of images• Contrast agents necessary for most scans

– Oral– Intravenous iodinated

Page 30: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Computed Tomography• Multidetector CT scans

– Advancement from tomographic imaging (slices) to volume imaging

– Produce a volume of data that can be manipulated– Reconstruct at 1-10 mm increments– Axial, sagittal, coronal, 3D reconstructions

Page 31: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Computed TomographyCoronal and sagittal reconstructions

Page 32: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Computed Tomography

• Large field of view– Entire cross-section of body

• Improved differentiation of soft tissue densities• Excellent spatial resolution

– Small 3-4 mm lymph nodes, vessels• Automated scanners

– Less operator-dependent• Ultra-fast scanners

– Suspended respiration– Less bowel motion artifact– Trauma

ADVANTAGES

Page 33: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT Density Differentiation

Page 34: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT of the Female Pelvis

• Exposure to ionizing radiation• Allergic reactions to intravenous contrast

– Mild to severe (anaphylaxis) • Contrast nephropathy

– May cause renal failure– Caution in diabetics with nephropathy

• Problems of dehydration– Cautious use in multiple myeloma, sickle cell

disease • Soft tissue differentiation not as good as MRI

DISADVANTAGES

Page 35: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT WindowsWindowing displays the image in differing shades of grayCorrespond to brightness and contrast

Soft tissue window Lung (air) window

Page 36: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT Windows

Soft tissue window Bone window

Windowing displays the image in differing shades of grayCorrespond to brightness and contrast

Page 37: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT Diagnosis• Trauma

Shattered spleen Fractured sacrum

Page 38: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT Diagnosis• Pulmonary embolism• Intravenous contrast material is necessary

Page 39: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT Diagnosis• Angiography• Bowel disorders

Aortic aneurysm Perforated sigmoid diverticulitis

Page 40: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

CT 3D Volume Rendering

Aorta, plaque Aortic arch

CT Angiogram

Page 41: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound

Sound Waves

Page 42: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound• Audible sound 20Hz-20KHz• Ultrasound >20Hz• Medical ultrasound 1-20

MHz• Transducer sends high

frequency sound waves into the body and gathers their reflections (echoes)

• Converts echoes into electronic signals

• Displays images on a monitor

Page 43: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound• Sound travels very well through fluid• Ultrasound is good for anything containing

fluid, as long as there is no interference for the sound beam to reach the fluid

Page 44: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound• Interferences to sound waves: air, bone,

metal, thick tissues, deep structures

Page 45: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound

• Multiplanar imaging in real-time• Non-invasive, safe, no radiation

– Pregnancy, Pediatrics• Relatively inexpensive• Widely available• Portable, bedside• Good contrast of tissue

layers in many organs

ADVANTAGES

Page 46: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound

• Good contrast of tissues layers

ADVANTAGES

Page 47: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Pelvic Ultrasound versus CT

Ultrasound

CT

Ovarian Neoplasm

Page 48: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound

• Relatively small field of view• Operator dependent: inconsistent reproducibility • Depends on sound penetration

– Air, bone, obesity

DISADVANTAGES

Page 49: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Diagnostic Ultrasound

• Trade-off between depth (beam penetration) and resolution– For deeper penetration need lower frequency

transducers, resulting in lower resolution

DISADVANTAGES

3.5 MHz 12 MHz

Page 50: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Doppler Ultrasound• Evaluation of blood flow

– Patency, direction, character of flow in vessels– Vascularity in a mass

Carotid artery Testicular flow

Page 51: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

FD = (FR - FT ) = 2 • FT • v • cos

c

v

FT

FR

The Doppler EquationThe relationship of Doppler frequency shift

to velocity of a moving object

C =1540m/sec speed of sound in tissues

Page 52: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

3D Ultrasound

1st Trimester fetus 3rd Trimester fetus

Page 53: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Magnetic Resonance ImagingMagnetic fields

Radiofrequency waves

Page 54: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

• Patient placed inside a large cylinder-shaped magnet

• Radio waves 10,000 - 30,000 stronger the earth’s magnetic field are sent thru body

• Nuclei of body’s (hydrogen) atoms shift position

• As they move back they send out radio waves

• Scanner detects the signals• Creates image based on

location & strength of signals

                                       

                                 

Page 55: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

• Large field of view– Cross-section of entire body– Volume imaging (from tomographic imaging,

slices)• No ionizing radiation as with CT • Not as operator dependent as ultrasound• Much fewer contrast allergies and less risk of

contrast nephropathy than with iodinated agent used in CT

• Excellent contrast resolution among tissue layers, esp. fat, hemorrhage

ADVANTAGES

Page 56: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Magnetic Resonance ImagingLarge field of view

Excellent Contrast Resolution

Page 57: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Ultrasound vs CT vs MRIField of View, Excellent Contrast Resolution

Ultrasound

MRI CT

Page 58: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging• Exquisite neuroanatomical detail• Musculoskeletal disorders• Cardiovascular

Page 59: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

• Motion related artifacts– Bowel peristalsis– Respiratory motion

• Cost $$$• Image production is time-consuming with

complicated protocols & scan time• Intravenous contrast is often required to

improve tissue differentiation• Claustrophobia• Obesity

DISADVANTAGES

Page 60: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

• Contraindication in patients with ferromagnetic metallic objects, implants, foreign bodies:– Metallic fragments in eye– Cochlear implants– Cardiac pacemakers– Brain aneurysm clips– Certain heart valves– Neurological stimulators

• Orthopedic devices are not harmful to patient, but create artifacts

• Intrauterine devices are safe

METALLIC OBJECTS

Page 61: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Nuclear ImagingGamma waves

Page 62: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Nuclear Medicine• Uses small amounts of radioactive material

for diagnosis and treatment • Molecular Imaging: images reflect biological

processes that take place at the cellular and subcellular levels

• Evaluates physiological function rather than anatomic structure

• Uses radiopharmaceuticals: agents that have trace amounts of radioactive atoms attached

• Radiation emitted from the patient is imaged by a gamma camera, SPECT or PET scanner

Page 63: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Nuclear Medicine Applications

• Oncology: tumor localization, staging, metastases

• Cardiology: myocardial perfusion scans• Gastrointestinal: acute cholecystitis, biliary

tract, GI bleeding• Pulmonary: ventilation, perfusion• Infectious disease: localize infections (subtle)• Therapy, e.g. I-131 for thyrotoxicosis, thyroid

cancer

Page 64: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Common Radionuclides

• Intravenous administration– Technetium-99m– Iodine-123 and 131– Thallium-210– Gallium-67– Fluorine-18 Fluorodeoxyglucose– Indium-111 labeled leukocytes

• Inhaled gaseous/aerosol radionuclides– Xenon-133– Krypton-81m– Technicium-99m gas

Page 65: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Gamma Camera

Page 66: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Bone Scan: Metastases

Page 67: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

PET Scan: Cancer Detection

• Positron Emission Tomography

• 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)

• Primarily used for diagnosis, staging & monitoring of cancers: lung, breast, cervical, colorectal, esophagus, head & neck, lymphoma, melanoma

Lymphoma pre and post chemotherapy

Page 68: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

PET-CT ScannerCombined PET scanner and CT scanner

Page 69: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

PET-CT• Imaging by “fusion” of anatomy and physiology• Superimposition of the anatomic images of a CT scan

and the co-registration of physiologic uptake of a radionuclide agent (molecular imaging)

Page 70: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

PET-CT ScansFusion imaging: Lingular mass

CT PET PET-CT

Page 71: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Summary

• Medical imaging is essential for medical practice

• Interpretation of various imaging modalities requires training and experience

• Radiologist specializes in various imaging modalities– Consultant– Interventionalist

Page 72: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Sample Question

Of the following imaging modalities, which test has the least harmful effects for a fetus?

a. CT

b. Ultrasound

c. MRI

d. Nuclear medicine

Page 73: INTRODUCTION to MEDICAL IMAGING Oksana H. Baltarowich, MD Professor Radiology Department of Radiology Jefferson Medical College.

Thank you for your attention!


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