Modalities
Pioneers
Acronyms
Patient Care & Communication
Fun Facts
100

This imaging modality is commonly used to view soft tissues and is known for its detailed images of the brain and spine.

What is MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)?

100

Known as the "Father of X-rays," this physicist discovered X-rays in 1895 and took the first X-ray image of his wife's hand.

Who is Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen?

100

This acronym stands for the system that stores and manages digital medical images in healthcare facilities.

What is PACS (Picture Archiving and Communication System)?

100

This word refers to the process of explaining a procedure to a patient and getting their permission to proceed.

What is informed consent?

100

This element, often associated with radiology, was discovered by Marie and Pierre Curie and is known for its radioactive properties.

What is radium?

200

This quick, commonly used imaging technique utilizes X-rays to capture images of the chest, abdomen, and bones.

What is an X-ray?

200

This scientist won two Nobel Prizes and made significant contributions to the understanding and use of radioactivity in medicine.

Who is Marie Curie?

200

In MRI technology, this acronym refers to a common imaging sequence used to differentiate between various tissue types based on their relaxation times.

What is T1 (T1-weighted imaging)?

200

This term describes the ideal position in which patients are placed to reduce motion and improve the quality of radiographic images.

What is immobilization?

200

This body part was the first to be X-rayed by Wilhelm Roentgen in 1895, showing the bones and a ring on his wife's finger.

What is the hand?

300

This imaging modality is used to visualize blood flow through vessels after injecting a contrast agent and is often performed in real-time.

What is angiography?

300

In 1913, this American inventor developed the rotating anode X-ray tube, a technology still used in modern radiology equipment.

Who is William D. Coolidge?

300

This acronym refers to a technique that combines multiple X-ray images taken from different angles to produce cross-sectional images of the body.

What is CT (Computed Tomography)?

300

Radiologic technologists use this protective device to minimize patient exposure to ionizing radiation, especially around reproductive organs.

What is a lead shield or lead apron?

300

In radiography, this unique 3D imaging technique was first invented in the 1970s and has become essential for detailed internal body scans.

What is CT (Computed Tomography)?

400

This modality uses sound waves to produce images of organs and tissues, and it’s often used in obstetrics and cardiology.

What is ultrasound?

400

This radiologist introduced the technique of cerebral angiography in the 1920s, allowing doctors to visualize blood vessels in the brain for the first time.

Who is Egas Moniz?

400

This acronym describes the process of using X-rays to examine dense breast tissue and identify abnormalities in mammography.

What is DBT (Digital Breast Tomosynthesis)?

400

This term describes the act of maintaining a clear, respectful, and professional relationship with patients, ensuring that personal boundaries are respected.

What is professional rapport?

400

This rare condition, sometimes discovered incidentally on X-rays, involves stones that form within the veins of the urinary tract.

What are phleboliths?

500

This modality uses a small amount of radioactive material to visualize metabolic processes in the body, particularly for oncology, cardiology, and neurology.

What is PET scan (Positron Emission Tomography)?

500

Known for his work in ultrasound imaging, this Austrian-American neurologist and psychiatrist helped develop the first hand-held ultrasound device for medical imaging in the 1940s.

Who is Karl Dussik?

500

This advanced MRI acronym represents an imaging technique that tracks water diffusion to map white matter pathways in the brain.

What is DTI (Diffusion Tensor Imaging)?

500

This communication technique is used to ensure understanding by having the patient repeat back key information, helping to confirm that they comprehend the procedure.

What is the teach-back method?

500

This unusual type of X-ray imaging technique captures dynamic movement of swallowing and is often used to assess patients with swallowing difficulties.

What is a barium swallow or fluoroscopy of swallowing?

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