I'm recently started back doing general xray after 5 years in MRI. I forgot the love I had for general xray. I love these videos! They would be useful for undergrad students.
Very good explanation of the process. It's very similar to a Judet Pelvis from what I'm seeing. I will understand this process completely after watching this video two more times. I will subscribe if you have more positioning videos on this channel. I'm in my last year of Radiologic Technology. This will help me perfect my craft!
At 9.39 we see the collimation opened so it includes the symphysis pubis. This is because the centring point method is being used and there is no measure of how much radiation misses the receptor top and bottom. When judging how good an AP lumbar spine is, look at the collimation. If there is none on the top and bottom of the radiograph, it was the position of the receptor that has determined the success of the image, not the exact centring point. When I produce an AP lumbar, I collimate to the receptor or less, then use the illuminated field produced by the light beam diaphragm as my only positioning guide. For women, this means I can usually exclude the ovaries from the primary beam because I only show down to the bottom of the SIJs. I use knowledge of anatomy to determine what will be on the bottom of the radiograph and what is above that is the projection. Here is my collimated lumbar spine, minimal dose series. th-cam.com/video/4W1g0UVOGq0/w-d-xo.htmlsi=2kxhsXDyyb29gnTC For laterals, about 5% of women don't need a down tilt on the tube. These are extremely big ladies. To get the perfect lateral requires putting every patient in the perfect position and learning from that. Raise the shoulder and lower the hip they are lying on. This puts a sway in to the back. The line between sacrum and T12 is perpendicular to the angle required for the tube. Always using a breathing technique. I use no centring points, only accurate collimation so I put the sacrum on the bottom of the image, then use lead to protect the ovaries from a primary beam exposure on most women. So my technique reduces the radiation dose to ovaries to 1/1000th of the techniques used in text books and taught by tutors. Why haven't we challenged the way we do radiography in 100 years? Here is my routine standard for lateral lumbars with the masking taken off th-cam.com/video/255Z8dtPNpk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=uv-HrYIg8-a49H1n
Pretty sure they mean placing it on the IR itself It’s controversial to me though cause if you suck at placing it on the IR and have to retake it cause it’s on the spine or cut off from collimation, that’s a dumb reason to have to retake an image
Just started my clinicals this year and I love the way you explaining everything
I'm recently started back doing general xray after 5 years in MRI. I forgot the love I had for general xray. I love these videos! They would be useful for undergrad students.
update
@@TejRecordz haven't gotten a patient capable yet. All have been really sick or incubated
Just earned yourself a new student
Your teaching has been very helpful
I wanna meet this lady in real life
Her explanation is amazing
Very good explanation of the process. It's very similar to a Judet Pelvis from what I'm seeing. I will understand this process completely after watching this video two more times. I will subscribe if you have more positioning videos on this channel. I'm in my last year of Radiologic Technology. This will help me perfect my craft!
What is factors of
Ap and lateral
At 9.39 we see the collimation opened so it includes the symphysis pubis. This is because the centring point method is being used and there is no measure of how much radiation misses the receptor top and bottom. When judging how good an AP lumbar spine is, look at the collimation. If there is none on the top and bottom of the radiograph, it was the position of the receptor that has determined the success of the image, not the exact centring point. When I produce an AP lumbar, I collimate to the receptor or less, then use the illuminated field produced by the light beam diaphragm as my only positioning guide. For women, this means I can usually exclude the ovaries from the primary beam because I only show down to the bottom of the SIJs. I use knowledge of anatomy to determine what will be on the bottom of the radiograph and what is above that is the projection. Here is my collimated lumbar spine, minimal dose series. th-cam.com/video/4W1g0UVOGq0/w-d-xo.htmlsi=2kxhsXDyyb29gnTC
For laterals, about 5% of women don't need a down tilt on the tube. These are extremely big ladies. To get the perfect lateral requires putting every patient in the perfect position and learning from that. Raise the shoulder and lower the hip they are lying on. This puts a sway in to the back. The line between sacrum and T12 is perpendicular to the angle required for the tube. Always using a breathing technique. I use no centring points, only accurate collimation so I put the sacrum on the bottom of the image, then use lead to protect the ovaries from a primary beam exposure on most women. So my technique reduces the radiation dose to ovaries to 1/1000th of the techniques used in text books and taught by tutors. Why haven't we challenged the way we do radiography in 100 years? Here is my routine standard for lateral lumbars with the masking taken off th-cam.com/video/255Z8dtPNpk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=uv-HrYIg8-a49H1n
Can you explain the obliques
Thank you 😊
Yo a blessing Lady...#John 14:6..💕💕💕
neck of scottie dog is pars interarticularis
lazy marker placement
Please tell me whats better, Im a student and trying to learn!
Pretty sure they mean placing it on the IR itself
It’s controversial to me though cause if you suck at placing it on the IR and have to retake it cause it’s on the spine or cut off from collimation, that’s a dumb reason to have to retake an image
Thank you so much