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Prime Exposure Factors 1

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Presentation on theme: "Prime Exposure Factors 1"— Presentation transcript:

1 Prime Exposure Factors 1
By Professor Stelmark

2 Properties of X-rays Highly penetrative invisible rays
Electrically neutral Polyenergetic Liberate minute amounts of heat on passing through matter Travel ordinarily in straight lines Travel with the speed of light in vacuum Ionize gasses Cause fluorescence in certain crystals Cannot be focused by lenses Affect photographic film Produce chemical and biological changes by ionization Produce secondary and scatter radiation

3 Highly penetrative invisible rays
Lead Aluminum paper

4

5 Electrically neutral

6 Travel ordinarily in straight lines

7 Travel with the speed of light in vacuum
3 x 108 m/s 3 x 105 km/s 186,000 miles/s

8 Affect photographic film

9 Produce secondary and scatter radiation

10 Methods of Image Identification
Radiographic Photographic Electronic

11 Radiographic

12 Permanently generated in the image with the use of x-rays.
Admissible in court

13 Patient information, date, type of x-am.
Photographic Patient information, date, type of x-am. Admissible in court

14 Electronic R upright Patient information incorporated into the radiograph during the processing admissible in court . After processing is NOT.

15 NOT admissible in court .
Information incorporated into the radiograph after the processing using marking pens is NOT admissible in court .

16 Hostos Lab Radiograph Marking Practices
Lead room letter markers A B C Lead anatomic side marker L or R Lead experiment exposure number marker

17 A R 1

18 Important Radiological Science Terminology
Photons X-ray photons X-ray beam quantity X-ray beam quality Radiation exposure Exposure factors Image receptor digital and analog SID SSD X-ray beam field size Irradiated area

19 Photons and x-ray photons
A photon is the smallest quantity of any type of electromagnetic energy, just as an atom is the smallest quantity of an element. A photon may be pictured as a small bundle of energy, sometimes called a quantum,that travels through space at the speed of light. We speak of x-ray photons, light photons, and other types of electromagnetic energy as photon radiation.

20 X-ray beam quantity Refers to the total number of x-ray photons in a beam. Beam quantity is affected by mAs, kVp, and distance. The radiographer should associate quantity with radiation dose. All other factors remaining constant, an increase in quantity increases the radiation dose delivered to the patient. Beam quantity is directly proportional to mAs. Because mAs controls the number of electrons boiled off of the filament and available to produce x-rays, it is considered the primary factor controlling quantity. Doubling the mAs doubles the output. When adjustments in quantity are desired, mAs is the factor adjusted.

21 X-ray beam quality Refers to the penetrating power of the x-ray beam. Penetration refers to those x-ray photons that are transmitted through the body and reach the image receptor. It is desirable for some of the x-ray photons to penetrate the anatomic area of interest, or no image would result. Photons that reach the image receptor create the dark shades of the image and areas where no photons reach result in the light or clear areas of the image. Both are needed to create the image. Beam quality is affected by kVp and is controlled mainly by adjusting kVp. As kVp increases, the beam's ability to penetrate matter also increases and vice versa. X-ray beams with high energy (from high kVp settings) are said to be high-quality or hard beams. X-ray beams with low energy (from low kVp settings) are said to be low-quality or soft beams.

22 Radiation exposure The intensity of the x-ray beam of an x-ray imaging system is measured in roentgens (R) or milliroentgens (mR) and is called the x-ray quantity. Another term, radiation exposure, is often used instead of x-ray intensity or x-ray quantity. All have the same meaning and all are measured in roentgens.

23 Exposure factors The primary exposure technique factors the radiographer selects on the control panel are milliamperage, time of exposure, and kilovoltage peak (kVp). Depending on the type of control panel, milliamperage and exposure time may be selected separately or combined as one factor, milliamperage/second (mAs). Regardless, it is important to understand how changing each separately or in combination affects the radiation reaching the IR and the radiographic image

24 CR computed radiography
Image receptor Is any sensitive surface that receives the image forming x-rays from the patient and converts them into another form that can be visible analog CR computed radiography

25 DR digital

26 SID source to Image Receptor Distance
The distance between the source of the radiation and the IR

27 SOD source to Object Distance
Refers to the distance from the x-ray source (focal spot) to the object being radiographed.

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29 X-ray beam field size Refers to the dimension of an x-ray beam

30 Irradiated area Refers to the object area being irradiated

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