Thursday, November 28, 2019
Radiology Essays - Medical Physics, Medical Imaging,
  Radiology    Radiology    Humanity, constantly learning, growing,  and facing more challenges each second  of the day. Whether the challenges  are mental or purely physical. We have found more  efficient, safer, and easier ways of doing  the tasks we may face. From moving cargo, to  sending information via the Internet.    Probably the greatest accomplishments we have  made, are in the studies of medicine/treatment.    And to be specific, the study of radiology.    Radiology, the process of working and viewing  inside the human body without breaking the skin. By using radiant  energy, which may take the form of x rays or other types of radiation,  we are able to diagnose and treat many diseases and injuries. Both  diagnostic and therapeutic radiology involve the use of ionizing radiation  ( Beta, Alpha, Gamma, and x rays), with the exception of the MRI, which  uses a magnetic field rather then radiation.    Radiology is classified as being either  diagnostic or therapeutic. Diagnostic radiology is an evaluation  of the body, by means of static or dynamic images or anatomy, physiology,  and alterations caused by injury or disease. A majority of these  pictures are formed by passing a low or high level of x rays through the  part of the body being examined, producing the static image on film.    This image is called a radiograph or x ray picture. The image it's  self may have many forms. It could be a common radiograph, such as  a chest x ray; a tomograph (Greek for "section"), which is a radiograph  obtained by timing the x ray exposure to correspond with the movement of  the x ray tube and film in opposite directions around the plane of the  body; or, finally, a computerized axial tomography (CAT or CT) scan.    Which is a computer analysis of a sharply limited, thin x ray beam passed  circumferentially through an area of the body, giving the doctor of Technician  a cross-sectional image. Much like that of slicing a loaf of bread  into sections.    Other images may be obtained by using ultrasound  or MRI, or by recording the activity of isotopes internally administered  and deposited in certain parts of our body. This practice is called  nuclear radiology or nuclear medicine. This include such techniques  as a PET scan, or positron emission tomography, which uses patterns of  the positron decaying to study metabolism reactions in the body. PET requires  a cyclotron as an on-site source of short-lived, positron-emitting isotopes.    The isotopes are injected into the patient along with a glucose related  compound, and the positrons collide with the electrons in the body  to produce photons. The photons are then tracked by a tomographic  scintillation counter, and the information is processed by a computer to  provide both image and data on blood flow and metabolic processes within  bodily tissues. PET scans are particularly useful for diagnosing  brain tumor and the effects of strokes on the brain, along with various  mental illnesses. They are also used in brain research and in mapping of  brain functions.    Another form of imaging is ultrasound.    Ultrasound, which uses very high frequency sound, is directed into the  body. And because the tissue interference's reflect sound, doctors  are able to produce, by use of a computer, a photograph or moving image  on a television. Ultrasound has many application uses on the body,  but is more commonly used in examinations of the fetus during pregnancy,  because use of radiation may affect the outcome of the baby. Some  other practices for ultrasound include examination of the arteries, heart,  pancreas, urinary system, ovaries, brain, and spinal cord. And because  sound travels well through fluids it is a very useful technique for diagnosing  cysts( which are filled with fluid), and fluid filled structures such as  the bladder. And since sound is absorbed by air and bone it is impossible  to use a ultrasound on bones or lungs.    The sound waves are produced by a random  oscillating crystal, and are inaudible to humans. A instrument called  a transducer is used to transmit the sound waves and receive the echoes.    The transducer must be in close contact with the skin, and a jelly like  substance is used to improve the quality of the transmission.    And last of the diagnostic imaging tools  is the MRI. MRI, which stands for Magnetic Resonance Imaging.    Was a technique developed in the 1950's by Felix Bloch, and is the most  versatile, powerful, and sensitive tool in use. The process of MRI  was originally called NRI (Nuclear Resonance Imaging), but was found to  be to confusing due to the fact that MRI's don't use radioactivity and  ionizing radiation. The MRI generates a very powerful electromagnetic  field, which allows the radiologist to generate thin-section images of  any part    
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