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Angiography: The use of X-ray images of blood
vessels after injecting dye (contrast material) into the bloodstream.
Used as a tool to diagnose many diseases affecting the arteries
and veins, including inflammatory diseases.
ANODE: The positive end of the x-ray tubes internal components, which is usually spinning, also refereed to as the target.
AUTOTRANSFORMER: A transformer in which the primary and secondary coils have all or part of their turns in common.
Bariatric: Bariatrics is the branch of
medicine that deals with the causes, prevention, and treatment
of obesity.[1] The term bariatrics was created around 1965,[2]
from the Greek root baro ("weight," as in barometer) and suffix
-iatrics ("a branch of medicine," as in pediatrics). Besides the
pharmacotherapy of obesity, it is concerned with obesity surgery.
BUCKY: A device that shifts the x-ray grid during an exposure so as not to image grid lines.
Cardiac Catheterization: An invasive imaging
procedure that involves inserting a catheter into a blood vessel
in the arm or leg, and guiding it to your heart with the aid of
a special x-ray machine. Contrast dye is injected through the
catheter so that x-ray movies of your valves, coronary arteries
and heart chambers are taken. Cardiac catheterization is also
called coronary angiography.
Cath Lab: The specialized radiologic suite
where cardiac catheterization is performed.
CATHODE: The negative end of an x-ray tubes internal components, where the filament is contained.
COLLIMATOR: A device used to produce the desired size of the x-ray field.
CR: Computed Radiology equipment converts analog
image on a plate to a digital image viewable on a computer screen.
DENSITOMETER: An instrument for determining the optical density of a radiograph.
DICOM: Digital Imaging and Communications
in Medicine (DICOM) is a comprehensive set of standards governing
how medical images are captured, stored and transmitted. It includes
a file format definition and a network communications protocol.
This protocol is an application protocol, it uses TCP/IP to communicate
between systems. DICOM files can be exchanged between two entities
that have the capability to receive the information: image and
patient data: in DICOM format.
DR: Digital Radiography equipment captures digital
images from the beginning.
ELECTRON VOLT: A unit of energy equal to the energy gained by an electron in passing from a point of low potential to a point one volt higher in potential.
EMULSION: The photo-sensitive coating (consisting of silver halide) of x-ray film.
Endoscopy: A collective name for all visual
inspections of body cavities using tiny video camera housed in
an illuminated flexible tube.
ERCP: Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
(en-do-SKAH-pik RET-ro-grade ko-LAN-jee-o-PAN-kree-a-TAW-gra-fee).
A procedure to x-ray the bile and pancreatic ducts. In this procedure,
a thin, lighted tube (endoscope) is passed through the mouth and
down into the first part of the small intestine (duodenum). A
smaller tube (catheter) is then inserted through the endoscope
into the bile and pancreatic ducts. A dye is injected through
the catheter into the ducts, and an x-ray is taken.
FILAMENT: The device located at the cathode end of the x-ray tube that is responsible for producing the focal spot.
FILTRATION: The process of increasing the mean energy of polychromatic radiation.
Fluoroscopy: A study of moving body structures,
similar to an x-ray "movie." A continuous x-ray beam is passed
through the body part being examined, and is transmitted to a
TV-like monitor so that the body part and its motion can be seen
in detail.
FOCUSING CUP: The structure where the filament is located, generally made from molybdenum.
FORCED EXTINCTION: A method of terminating an exposure of a single phase x-ray generator regardless of where the incoming cycle is.
GRID: A device used to reduce the amount of scatter radiation to a radiograph.
HALF-VALUE LAYER: The amount of Aluminum that is needed to reduce the x-ray beams
intensity by one half. Used in expressing the quality of a x-ray beam.
HEAT UNITS: The unit of measurement used to determine the maximum heat loading
potential of a x-ray tube.
HEEL EFFECT: A variation of x-ray intensity in the x-ray tubes output caused by the orientation of components in the tube. The anode side will produce less intensity than the cathode side.
HIGH SPEED STARTER: A device used to accelerate the x-ray tube anode from a stop
to 10800 R.P.M.
HIS: Hospital information system. A system
that provides the information management features that hospitals
need for daily business. Typically includes patient tracking,
billing and administrative programs and also may include clinical
features.
IHE: Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise
Initiative (IHE Initiative). IHE is an initiative by healthcare
professionals and industry to improve the way computer systems
in healthcare share information. IHE promotes the coordinated
use of established standards such as DICOM and HL7 to address
specific clinical needs in support of optimal patient care.
INTENSIFYING SCREENS: Devices that are placed against the film to provide for converting few x-rays photons inio many light photons.
LANMIT: LANMIT 4(Large Area New-MIS sensor
and TFT)
mAs: A Product of the tube current times the exposure time.
MIS Sensor: Solid-state metal-insulator-semiconductor
MOLYBDENUM: A metallic element used in x-ray tubes because of its efficiency in producing x-ray photons.
OBJECT TO IMAGE DISTANCE: The measurement used to define the distance from the object that is being radiographed to the film.
OCS: Order Communications System. One of the
initial components of a hospital information system, such as requests
for blood tests to be performed by a laboratory, or medications
to be dispensed by the pharmacy.
PENUMBRA: The term used to describe the unsharp areas at edges of an object on a radiograph.
PHOTOTIMER: A device used to control the exposure of a x-ray generator to produce consistent densities from radiograph to radiograph.
QUANTUM MOTTLE: The "patchy" pattern that can appear on a radiograph caused by an ununiform intensity of the x-ray beam and intensifying screen materials.
Radiography: the creation of radiographs,
photographs made by exposing a photographic film or other image
receptor to X-rays. Since X-rays penetrate solid objects, but
are slightly attenuated by them, the picture resulting from the
exposure reveals the internal structure of the object. The most
common use of radiography is in the medical field (where it is
known as medical imaging), but veterinarians and engineers also
use radiography.
RADIOLUCENT: The ability of an object to not absorb x-rav photons when being placed in the x-ray beam path.
RECEPTOR: The device in which the x-ray beam is projected onto after first penetrating the object that is to be examined.
RECIPROCITY FAILURE: The inability to produce radiographs with the same density, given the same mAs, but different exposure times.
RESOLVING POWER: The ability of an optical system to form distinguishable images of objects separated by small angular distances.
RIS: Radiology Information System is used by
radiology departments to store, manipulate and distribute patient
radiological data and imagery. The system generally comprises
of patient tracking and scheduling, result reporting and image
tracking capabilities.
SENSITOMETER: A device used to place a calibrated gray scale on a piece of x-ray film to determine film/processor reproducibility.
SOURCE TO IMAGE DISTANCE: The measurement used to define the distance between the focal spot and the film.
SPACE CHARGE EFFECT: A condition that occurs in x-ray tubes that produces a nonlinear output from the filament supply when increasing the voltage linearly.
TUNGSTEN: A high-melting metallic element used in x-ray tubes because of the efficiency of x-ray photons it produces.
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