Title: Unit 8 - Medical Physics
1Unit 8 - Medical Physics
2Aims of this Session
- Production of and uses of thermographic images
- Introduce the production of dangers of using x-
rays - Stochastic Non Stochastic effects
- Somatic Hereditary effects
- Uses of Radioisotopes Nuclear Medicine
- Production uses of Medical Ultrasound
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
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4Thermography
- Infra-red detectors pick up IR radiation
- Amount of radiation increases with
temperature therefore thermography allows
you to visualise variations in temperature
- computer algorithms used to interpret data and
produce a usable image
5Why is this Useful?
- Certain pathologies cause temperature
differentials - Thermography detects these with high sensitivity
accuracy - Non invasive
- NO Ionising Radiation used
6Types of Diagnosis
- Sports injuries
- Breast cancer screening
- Monitoring of post operative infection
7What we do in Radiology Departments
- Plain film radiography
- Contrast studies
- Computerised Tomography
- Radioisotope imaging
- Ultrasound
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- Bone density measurement
- Positron emission tomography
8X Rays
Discovered in 1895 by Roentgen X Rays
because he didnt know what they were! An
ionising radiation at a higher level on EM
spectrum Higher frequency or shorter wavelength
9X-ray Production
10X rays, the risks and dangers.
- Ionising Radiation potentially damaging
- Damage is influenced by
- amount of body tissue irradiated
- type of body tissue irradiated
- dose received
- dose rate
- Risk minimised using ALARA principle
11Precautionary Measures
- Legislation
- Ionising Radiation Regulations 1999
- IR(ME)R 2000
- In Practice we use
- radiation protection
- ALARA principle
12Staff Protection
- Not place themselves in the primary beam
- Use of the inverse square law
- Use of lead glass panels
- Use of lead rubber coats/thyroid shields/lead
glasses - Limit of time spent in fluoroscopy especially
during pregnancy - QA of the equipment
- Dose monitoring
13Patient Protection
- Correct exposure factors
- QA done daily on equipment
- Collimation of the primary beam
- Correct focus/film distance
- Use of appropriate lead rubber protection where
appropriate ie gonads/eyes/thyroid - Appropriate examination
- Well trained staff
14X Ray Effects
- Stochastic no threshold for damage
- Non stochastic a quantifiable threshold
- Effects can take place in somatic cells or be
passed on (hereditary)
15Stochastic Effects
- Probability of the effect of radiation which can
be either radiation induced cancers or genetic
effects. - No safe dose limit
- Statistically generated
- Lower doses of radiation
16Non Stochastic Effects
- Also called deterministic effects
- There is usually a threshold below which the
effect will not occur - Examples are erythema (skin reddening) or
epilation (hair loss) - Doses are large eg following radiotherapy or as a
result of a radiation accident (Chernobyl)
17Damage caused by radiation
- SOMATIC caused to the individual
- GENETIC passed onto future generations
18How are effects measured?
- Sievert is unit of measurement equivalent to
a deposit of 1 joule of energy per
kilogram mass of tissue - Relates dose absorbed in tissue to biological
damage caused effective dose - This will depend on the type of radiation
- Typical background radiation results in an
effective dose of 2.4 mSv/year
19Examples of Doses
- Were all exposed to background radiation
- Chest few days
- Skull few weeks
- Spine/Abdo Few months or a year
- CT Chest few years
- Additional risk of cancer per exam
- 1 in 1,000 to 1 in 1,000,000
- Risk of cancer 1 in 3
20Image production
- Basic form uses
photographic film - Denser structures attenuate the x-rays
- When film is exposed to x rays it turns
black - Image is contrast between two
- Contrast can be manipulated using
exposure factors and other aids such as
contrast media
21Variations in Contrast
22Using contrast media
23Factors affecting contrast
- Transmission x-ray photons that pass through
the patient unchanged. - Absorbtion x-ray photons that transfer their
energy to the patient. - Absorbtion is proportional to the degree of
attenuation thickness, density atomic number - Scatter radiation that changes direction or is
modified by decrease in energy as it passes
through a body - Attenuation process that x-rays lose power as
it travels through matter
24Plain film radiography
25Mobile Radiography
- Mobile unit can be moved to patients bedside, AE
dept or theatre - Can be mains or battery powered
- Can produce images as good as purpose built
units.
26Digital imaging
- Images stored on computer
- No films
- Image manipulation
- Multiple viewing
- Storage
- Volume
- Physical principles remain the same
- But because its Windows based
27C arm for angiography
28Ultrasound
- Ultrasound uses sound waves to produce images
- Becoming highly skilled
- Increasingly specialised
- Images are very dependent on the
ultrasonographers skill
29Ultrasound images
30Ultrasound images
31Computerised Tomography
32CT explained
- Tomography
- tomos slice
- graphia describing
- Where digital geometry processing is used to
generate a three-dimensional image of the
internals of an object from a large series of two
dimensional x-ray images taken around a single
axis of rotation.
33CT in practice
- Data is obtained digitally
- Algorithms allow manipulation of data
- Windowing is process of using a variety of
Hounsfield Units - Setting a top and bottom of range allows various
tissue types to be imaged - Can get rid of what you are not interested in
34Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- The latest imaging tool
- Images are similar in appearance to CT but
produced without radiation - Technology utilises radio waves and a huge magnet
to produce images - The magnet must be kept cool to allow
superconductivity. It has to be cooled with
liquid helium to -270 degrees.
35MR scanner
36MR Precautions
- Not everybody can have an MRI scan
- Metal implants eg cardiac pacemakers, aneurysm
clips - Tattoos
- Metallic foreign bodies
- Pregnant women
- claustrophobics
37MRI Images
38CT versus MR
- Principles of data collection are the same
- MR is Non Ionising
- Better at imaging softer tissue
39Which Modality to use
- What are you attempting to image?
- What level of information do you wish to obtain?
- How do you wish to manipulate it?
- What protection measures need to be considered?
40Radioisotope Imaging
- What is an isotope?
- Nuclei of atoms consist of protons and neutrons.
- The number of protons is called the atomic number
- The number of protons and neutrons is called the
mass number - All the atoms of one element with the same atomic
number but different mass number are called
isotopes
41Radioisotopes
- Isotopes behave chemically the same
- some of the radioisotopes will be radioactive ie
emit radiation - By attaching these radioactive isotopes to
certain pharmaceuticals we can use the emitted
radiation to produce images - Most commonly used isotope is Technetium99m
because it decays by gamma emission
42What is Radioactivity?
- Certain elements have isotopes which are unstable
- The unstable atoms emit particles or energy
- The particles or energy are radiation
- The process is unpredictable
- It is measured in Becquerels 1 Bq is one
decay event per second
43Radiation Types
- Alpha helium nuclei stopped by paper
- Beta electron, can be stopped by light metal
- Gamma EM photon, requires dense material to
absorb
44Half Life
- The time taken for half of the atoms of a given
sample to decay - Stays the same for a given isotope regardless of
the actual quantity - Expressed as a unit of time
- Can be validated using experimentation and
computer modeling
45Uses for Isotopes
- Nuclear Medicine
- Branch of imaging science which uses unsealed
radioactive sources - Gamma sources are isotope of choice
46How does it work?
- Radioactive isotopes are labelled with
pharmaceuticals - Now known as radiopharmaceuticals
- Introduced into the body
- Pharmaceuticals influence tissue type which
absorbs isotope - Gamma emission is detected by a gamma camera
- Image is digitally produced
47Gamma Camera
- Detects individual Gamma photons
- Builds up an image over a period of several
minutes - Useful to show biological (metabolic) processes
eg infections/secondary boney cancer deposits
48Why do we use Nuclear Medicine?
- Radiopharmaceuticals do not cause much harm in
proportion to benefit derived - Body will excrete material
- Radioactivity is short lived matter of hours
- Can be used to image anatomy and physiology
- Can be integrated with other modalities (PET)
49Production
- Most useful isotopes are not natural
- Must be produced by reactors
- Side product of used nuclear fuel
- Used uranium fuel has a content of molybdenum99
- Easily extracted
- Technetium99 is a daughter product
- A few micrograms of molybdenum99 will produce
enough technetium 99 to image 10,000 patients
50Radioisotope/NM Images
51Positron Emission Tomographylatest radiology
tool to image patients
52Positron Emission TomographyPET
53QUESTIONS?