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Examination of Neurosurgery Board
Examination of Neurosurgery Board

... 31. In patients with neurofibromatosis NF1, the most common CNS tumor is: a. Unilateral acoustic neurinoma b. Bilaetral acoustic neurinoma c. Meningioma d. Astrocytoma e. Central neurocytoma 32. A 43 year old woman with spastic paraparesis due to calcified central disc herniation at D8-D9. The pref ...
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Maximizing dose reductions with cardiac CT | SpringerLink

... Limiting field of view (Fov) An important technique that is currently underused, which will both minimize radiation and afford better image quality, is to restrict the xy field of view. A smaller xy field of view will improve image quality, as the FOV divided by 512 is the resolution in the X–Y axis ...
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Medical Imaging

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Quality Control in CT, a teamwork - 2015 Joint Congress on Medical
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...  Standardize performance assessment methodology and the quality criteria's in medical imaging;  Provide tools to hospitals and local imaging teams, that allow them to:  Monitor the performance of medical imaging systems and the application of radiation protection practices, in their daily work;  ...
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Full-Paying - Western Cape Government
Full-Paying - Western Cape Government

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RADIATION PROTECTION IN PEDIATRIC RADIOGRAPHY

... the responsibility of the radiology department to use proper imaging protocols and parameters for the size of the child. Equipment in a child friendly imaging department needs to be user friendly. The visual appearance of the equipment is also important to make it less frightening for children. It i ...
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... A film pack (A) consists of a black envelope (B) containing film (C) placed inside a special plastic film holder (D) Using metal filters typically lead (G), copper (H) and aluminum (I), the relative optical densities of the film underneath the filters can be used to identify the general energy range ...
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Radiosurgery

Radiosurgery is surgery using radiation, that is, the destruction of precisely selected areas of tissue using ionizing radiation rather than excision with a blade. Like other forms of radiation therapy, it is usually used to treat cancer. Radiosurgery was originally defined by the Swedish neurosurgeon Lars Leksell as “a single high dose fraction of radiation, stereotactically directed to an intracranial region of interest”. In stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), the word stereotactic refers to a three-dimensional coordinate system that enables accurate correlation of a virtual target seen in the patient's diagnostic images with the actual target position in the patient anatomy.Technological improvements in medical imaging and computing have led to increased clinical adoption of stereotactic radiosurgery and have broadened its scope in recent years. Notwithstanding these improvements, the localization accuracy and precision that are implicit in the word “stereotactic” remain of utmost importance for radiosurgical interventions today. Stereotactic accuracy and precision are significantly increased by using a device known as the N-localizer that was invented by the American physician and computer scientist Russell Brown and that has achieved widespread clinical use in several stereotactic surgical and radiosurgical systems.Recently, the original concept of radiosurgery has been expanded to include treatments comprising up to five fractions, and stereotactic radiosurgery has been redefined as a distinct neurosurgical discipline that utilizes externally generated ionizing radiation to inactivate or eradicate defined targets in the head or spine without the need for a surgical incision. Irrespective of the similarities between the concepts of stereotactic radiosurgery and fractionated radiotherapy, and although both treatment modalities are reported to have identical outcomes for certain indications, the intent of both approaches is fundamentally different. The aim of stereotactic radiosurgery is to destroy target tissue while preserving adjacent normal tissue, where fractionated radiotherapy relies on a different sensitivity of the target and the surrounding normal tissue to the total accumulated radiation dose. Historically, the field of fractionated radiotherapy evolved from the original concept of stereotactic radiosurgery following discovery of the principles of radiobiology: repair, reassortment, repopulation, and reoxygenation. Today, both treatment techniques are complementary as tumors that may be resistant to fractionated radiotherapy may respond well to radiosurgery and tumors that are too large or too close to critical organs for safe radiosurgery may be suitable candidates for fractionated radiotherapy.
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