Term
characteristics of X-rays |
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Definition
travel in straight lines but can be diverted, electromagnetic radiation, ionizing radiation, able to penetrate matter if energy is high enough, energy can be absobed by matter if energy is too low to penetrate |
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Term
types of pathways x-rays can take |
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Definition
absoption, penetration, partial absorption and forward scatter, partial absoption and backward scatter |
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Definition
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Term
what do differences in attenuation between different tissues allow? |
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Definition
allows the image to be established....radiographs are shadow-graphs |
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Term
3 parts of an xray device in clinic |
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Definition
1: anode, x-ray tube, cooling oil and step up transformer 2: beam indicating device/spacer cone 3: timer, settings, mA and kV changes |
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Term
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Definition
an x-ray tube characteried by a vacuum glass tube in an oil bath...for cooling purposes |
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Term
differences between anodes in dental and medical machines |
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Definition
dental machines have stationary anodes while medical machines have rotating anodes which move so as to reduce the heat and therefore wear of the machine so it lasts longer bc x-rays are taken over a longer period of time |
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Term
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Definition
filters the lower energy x-rays out of the specturm which results in an overall higher x-ray energy output producing a more quality picture |
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Term
what does no filtering of x-rays lead to? |
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Definition
results in more radiation absorption by the patient's tissues (the low energy x-rays will not penetrate the tissues and subsequently hit the image receptor). Produces a poor image |
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Term
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Definition
via beam collimation through differnt shaped filters and shape focusing attachments |
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Term
smaller surfaces irradiated results in what |
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Definition
less scattered radiation and lower radiation dose |
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Term
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Definition
it reduces the surface that is being irradiated. The latter results in less scatter (better image quality) and lower rdaiation dose |
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Term
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Definition
analog films, photostimulable phosphor storage plates (PPSPs), solid state sensors (CCD) |
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Term
what are solid state sensors |
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Definition
CCD - charged coupled devices and CMOS-complementary mtal oxide semiconductors = active pixel size) |
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Term
pros and cons of solid state sensors aka direct digital radiography |
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Definition
cons: volume of the sensor is substantial, hardware and cable limits which patients can handle them. Also, the actual size of the sensor is significantly smaller than the size of the captor which is a serious limitation Pros: easy to use and fast image acquisition and no possibility of double images |
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pros and cons of photo stimulable phosphor plates aka indirect digital radiography |
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Definition
cons: latent image is captures and is sensitive to white light (erases image). Red helium neon laser scan is needed, a photomultiplier tube captures the light and via an analog digital converter the image is displayed on a computer screen. Double images ARE POSSIBLE. Pros: all sizes are available and physical dimensions like analog intraoral film packet |
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Term
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Definition
the latitude of an image receptor is the difference in minimal and maxilmal exposure time to which the receptor can be exposed |
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Term
what does minimal exposure time correspond to |
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Definition
to the minimal grey value that will still be detectable. |
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Term
what does maximal exposure correspond to |
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Definition
to the maximum grey value that will still be detectable |
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Term
what happens below the minimal exposure time or above the maximum? |
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Definition
below the minimal...shows a white image (no exposure detected). Above the maximum exposure time the immage receptor will show a pitch black image (too much exposure detected)...meaning there is a happy medium to be found in x-ray exposure |
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Term
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Definition
has a wider latitude than a solid state sensor, because the relationship between optical density and exposure time is truly linear in PSPP |
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Term
solid state sensors and latitude |
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Definition
shows a linear relationship between optical density and exposure time, but its slope is very steep. This results in a more narrow latitude compared to PSPP |
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Term
overexposure of a solid state sensor |
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Definition
results in over saturation of the sensor with light and hence a shiny black image on the screen. The software cannot change that. The PSPP is more "forgiving" |
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Term
why can one gain a usable diagnostic image after unintentionally exposing a patient too long |
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Definition
because of the wider latitude of PSPP..due to the true linear relationship between optical density and exposure time |
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Term
justification principle of x-rays |
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Definition
one does not take a radiograph if the same information can be obtained in any other way. One does not take a radiograph if the patient is not capable of coping with the procedure. The benefit has to outweigh the risk for the patient. |
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Term
limitation principle of radiographs |
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Definition
one should always strive to keep the dose to the patient as low as possible...ALARA - as low as reasonably achievable |
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Term
optimization principle of radiographs |
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Definition
one should always strive to obtain the best image quality possible, but with both previous principles in mind |
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Term
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Definition
never hold the receptor/sensor/film. If someone has to help holding the detector, let a parent or care giver do it, while that person wears a lead apron. Never stand in the primary beam. Brick wall/lead equivalent thickness wall. if you cannot keep safe distance, wear lead apron with thyroid shielding |
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Term
what is the inverse square law |
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Definition
at a distance of 2 meters, the radiation beam is only at 1/4 of its original energy anymore...at 3 meters its 1/9th etc. |
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Term
if no barrier is available how should a practicioner stand? |
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Definition
at least 6 feet from the patient, at an angle of 90135 degrees to the central ray of the x-ray beam when the exposure is made |
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Term
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Definition
its the measure of the amount of energy absorbed from the radiation beam per unit mass of tissue. AKA 1 unit = gray (Gy) = J/kg |
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Term
what is the equivalent dose |
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Definition
this is the measure which allows the differnt radiobiological effectiveness of different types of radiation to be taken into account. unit = sievert (Sv). Each type of radiation obtains a radiation weighting factor "Wr" |
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Term
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Definition
a radiation weighing factor. Wr for x-rays = 1. Wr for alpha particles is 20 while the Wr for protons and fast neutrons = 10 |
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Term
what is the effective dose |
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Definition
this measurement allows doses of different investigations of different parts of the body to be compared, by converting all doses to an equivalent whole body dose. SEveral tissues are assigned a so called tissue weighting factor "Wt"...the more radiosensitive the organ, the higher the Wt...adding all the Wt results in a value of 1 |
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Term
equation for the effective dose |
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Definition
E = H x Wt....where H equals D (radiation dose) and E = the dose refferred to in general terms. |
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Term
important concept to keep in mind regarding the number of dental exposures and the individual |
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Definition
the individual doses encountered in a dental radiology may appear very small, however, one should never forget that the diagnostic burdne is an additional radiation burden to that which the ptient is already receiving from all types of backround radiation. Never forget that the number of dental exposures is significantly higher than from any other diagnostic radiation investigation |
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Term
organs and ionizing radiation |
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Definition
not all our organs are sa sensitive to ionizing radiation because of the tissue weighting factors. The younger, the more sensitive and vulnerable. The faster the tissues or cells grow and multiply, the ore sensitive and vulnerable...especially the head and neck (salivary glands, thyroid, lens of the eye, brain) |
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Term
deterministic effects of ionizing radiation |
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Definition
effect of ionizing radiatoin is proportional to the energy of the raditaion. There is a certain threshold dose under which no results will appear - but once that threshold is exceeded, the results will definitely occur |
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Term
the is the stochastic effect of ionizing radiation |
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Definition
there is a probability that certain effects will appear - the effect is not proportionte to the energy of the ionizing radiation. there is no threshold dose, so the effect can occur with any dose |
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Term
the dentists responsibility in administering an x-ray |
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Definition
the dental profession is committed to delivering the highest quality of care to each of its individual patients and applying advancements in technology and science to continually improve the oral health status of the US popoulation. However, the dentist must weigh the benefits of taking dental radiographs against the risk of exposing a patient to X-rays, the effects of which accumulate from multiple sources over time |
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Term
what are guidlines of radiation intended for |
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Definition
intended to serve as a resource for the practitioner and are not intended as standars of care requirements or regulation. |
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Term
ways to limit radiation exopsure - advise |
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Definition
1: fastest detectors, 2: collimation of the X-ray beam 3: proper exposure techniques 4: protective aprons and thyroid collars when appropriate 5: limit the number of images 6: receptor holders for BW and peri-apicals 7: staff and operator protection 8: hand-held devices (always protection shield)!! |
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Term
maximum permissible anual dose of ionizing radiation for health care workers |
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Definition
50 mSv...equivalent of 25,000 peri-apicals |
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Term
maximum life time dose of IR |
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Definition
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Term
if the annual radiation dose s more than 1 mSv/y, a health care worker should do what |
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Definition
wear a doimeter, while pregnant health care workers should ALWAYS wear a dosimeter |
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