Organization thy name is cellular...
Bones? Bones? Ain't no Bones here.
Breathe in. Breathe out.
Gimme a GI!
Randomness
100

4 stage of Mitosis. 

Extra Credit: Considered part of the 4th phase, but it's own step. 

What is Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase?

Extra Credit: Cytokinesis

100

These studies are sensitive but not specific.

What are bones studies? 

100

Having more than 2 large mismatched segments (higher); 2 medium or 1 large mismatched segment (moderate). 

What causes there to be higher and moderate chances of PE to be seen on V/Q scan? 

100

Hemangiomas. 

What is the most common benign tumor of the liver? 

100

They will correspond to an anatomical segment or lobe. (appear as triangular shaped wedges) 

What do defects of a Q scan correspond to? 

200

Malignant or cancerous spread to the connective tissues.

What is Sarcoma? 

200

Exchange of ion native to bone (calcium phosphate) for another labelled "bone seeking" ion (carbonate or fluoride).

Extra Credit: Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2

Bone radiopharmaceuticals use the localization process of heterionic exchange. What is this? 


Extra Credit: What is chemical formula of the hydroxyapatite crystal? 

200

Single Breath (Wash in)- distribution of inhaled bolus. Shows total lung capacity. 

Equilibrium- breathing in equal parts of Xe-133 and O2. Shows lung volume. 

Washout- breathing out all Xe-133. Shows rate of clearance. (Faster = better) 

What are the phases of a true Ventilation study? (Xe-133 gas) 

200

Inspiration and expiration breath-holding views of the liver. 

*If defect moves with the liver the most likely source is intrinsic disease.* 

What can help aid in the identification of defects caused by compression of the liver by the ribs?

200

tRNA- decode messages

mRNA- messengers

rRNA- combine with proteins to make ribosomes

What are the types of RNA and their basic jobs? 

300

Adenine and Thymine.

Guanine and Cytosine. 

Extra Credit: Deoxyribose. 

What are the nucleotide base pairs on a strand of DNA? 

Extra Credit: What are the borders of phosphate and sugar called? 

300

- staging malignant disease.

-evaluate primary neoplasm.

-diagnose early skeletal inflammatory disease. 

-determine bone viability.

-evaluate joint prosthetics. 

What are common indications for a bone scan? 

300

10 L/min with 5 mL of fluid containing up to 35 mCi of radiopharmaceutical.

Extra Credit: 2-5%

What is the flow rate of Tc-99m DTPA aerosol imaging? 

Extra Credit: How much actually reaches the lungs? 

300

60-90%

What is the tagging efficiency of in vivo Tc-99m pertechnetate? 

300

The liver, common bile duct, and GI tract are well visualized within 60 minutes of injection. 

What are visualized in acute cholecystitis? 

400

A selectively permeable barrier made of a phospholipid buliayer. 

What is the cell membrane and what is it made out of? 

400

Impaired blood flow, inflammatory response, tumor or radiation. 

What can cause lower accumulation of radiopharmaceuticals? 

400

Used to determine the feasibility of  lung reduction surgery and the extent of function in each region of the lungs. 

Extra Credit: R- 55%,   L- 45% 

What does a Lung Quantification test? 

Extra Credit: What is normal lung function? 

400

Maybe seen in the flow study, but are usually identified after the first 5 minutes. Will appear as focal areas of increased activity that becomes more intense as background activity decreases. 

What does an active bleed look like with Tc-99m Sulfur Colloid? 

400

Receives, modifies and packages vesicles to be sent to either lysosomes, the membrane or to be excreted. 

What does the Golgi Apparatus do? 

500

The RER is covered in ribosomes! They are the site of protein synthesis. 


What is the difference between the smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) and the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER)? 

500

Flow: increased uptake.

Blood Pool: diffuse uptake.

Delay: asymmetric uptake. 

*High Specificity*

What does Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) look like in a three phase bone scan? 

"Abnormal excitation of nervous tissue leading to abnormal impulses along nerves that affect blood vessels/skin." (Also called RSD)  

500

< 10um to bone marrow

<2 um to lymph nodes

<150 um to liver/spleen

*return anything with >150um sized particles*

What sizes of particles of Tc-99m MAA will travel and where will they go within the body? 

500

CCK (Sincalide)- given once gall bladder is visualized to monitor ejection fraction into the small intestine. 

Morphine (Astramorph)- given if gallbladder fails to visualize after 45-60 minutes. 

What additional medications are used in Cholescintigraphy? 

500

Hepatomegaly, chronic liver disease, focal nodular hyperplasia, liver enzyme abnormalities, functional asplenia, ectopic spleen, accessory spleen. 

What are indications for liver/spleen study?