Image Errors & Corrections
Exposure & Safety
Patient Positioning & Technique
Equipment & Principles
Anatomy & Interpretation
100

What causes a cone-cut?

PID not centered on the receptor.

100

What controls image density?

Milliamperage (mA) and exposure time.

100

What should the occlusal plane be during bite-wing exposure?

Parallel to the floor.

100

What part of the x-ray tube generates electrons?

The cathode (filament).

100

On a radiograph, what tooth structure appears as the most radiopaque layer?

Enamel.

200

Image appears elongated—what happened?

Vertical angulation too flat.

200

What is the purpose of filtration in the x-ray tubehead?

Removes low-energy, nonpenetrating x-rays.

200

The Frankfort plane should be ______ for panoramic images

Parallel to the floor.

200

What is the function of the anode?

Converts electrons into x-ray photons.

200

What thin radiopaque line surrounds the root of the tooth?

Lamina dura.

300

Overlapped contacts are due to what error?

Incorrect horizontal angulation.

300

How does kVp affect contrast?

High kVp = low contrast (many grays).

300

How is the receptor positioned for anterior periapicals using paralleling technique?

Vertically

300

What is the function of the PID?

Directs and limits the x-ray beam.

300

What is the small, round radiolucent opening seen near the roots of mandibular incisors?

Mental foramen.

400

What is the likely cause of a blurred image?

Patient or tubehead movement.

400

Name two methods to protect the patient from radiation.

Lead apron with thyroid collar; use digital sensors or rectangular collimation.

400

What happens if the patient’s head is not centered during a pano?

Teeth appear magnified on one side.

400

What device restricts the size of the beam?

Collimator.

400

How can you distinguish a radiolucent carious lesion from a cervical burnout artifact?

Caries have irregular borders and occur on enamel; cervical burnout has diffuse, even margins near CEJ.

500

A panoramic image with a reverse smile curve results from what?

Chin tipped too low.

500

What does the ALARA principle stand for, and why is it important?

As Low As Reasonably Achievable — it minimizes patient and operator radiation exposure.

500

What is the correct vertical angulation for bite-wings?

+10 degrees.

500

What component absorbs excess heat in the x-ray tube?

Copper stem.

500

What does a radiolucent periapical lesion usually indicate?

Infection or abscess.