Xie Wanying is really "stupid" and always stands on the inside.
The teacher ran away, busy with something, and asked the students to study by themselves.
She stood at the door of the control room, watching the two radiologists operating the instruments.
This is the magnetic resonance room. It takes the longest time to take an MRI film, which is longer than CT and X-ray. A cervical spine MRI scan sometimes takes an hour. Not only the patient is tired, but the doctor is also tired.
While the instrument was waiting for it to work, a female radiologist in her thirties went to get a thermos and fill it with water. When she saw her standing there alone, she was curious: "Why don't you go outside for some fresh air?"
"It's okay, teacher, I can stand still." Xie Wanying said.
As a student who was different from others, the female teacher told her: "You can just move a chair and sit on it."
The teacher was very nice. Xie Wanying moved a chair to sit on it and continued to watch the instrument rotate. Before her rebirth, she had also been an intern in the radiology department and found it very interesting. Now, she looked at the graphics on the computer monitor and wanted to let her brain and
The machine rotates together.
"Have you read the film?" the female teacher asked her.
"Try to read it." Xie Wanying said.
"I'll give you a picture. Tell me which part it was taken from." The female teacher casually took a picture next to her and showed it to her.
Xie Wanying took the film and only glanced at it. It was obviously: "Cranium."
Several undergraduates outside the door noticed the teacher talking and immediately walked in to join in the fun. Seeing the film in her hand, they all said in unison: "This is clearly the brain behind the photo."
Teacher, this question is very easy.
"What else?" The female teacher smiled again, with an unpredictable expression on her face.
Several undergraduate students wondered what the teacher meant.
Xie Wanying answered directly: "This is a CT scan, not an MRI scan."
The teacher was stunned for a moment and looked at her with a different look.
A few undergraduates blinked: Not MRI, but CT? This is an MRI examination room, not a CT examination room. Why did the teacher take CT films?
"Can you tell the difference between CT scans and MRI scans?" the teacher asked again.
X-ray films are definitely different from CT films and MRI films. They can be seen completely different at a glance. However, CT films and MRI films are very similar at first glance. If they are not labeled, let alone laymen who have not seriously studied diagnostic radiology.
It's hard to tell the difference.
The teacher is asking you, which is equivalent to asking test questions for all the trainees today.
Almost all the students were dumbfounded. It was their first day as a trainee in the radiology department. They had only attended one or two classes in class, and the classroom teacher only had time to give an overview.
Some students may review the following homework in advance, but without endorsement, they are suddenly asked to answer specific questions about this kind of horizontal comparison. The students are confused because the book knowledge they have learned has not had time to connect with reality.
Many students looked at each other.
The teacher laughed when he saw it: "It seems that the teacher in class didn't tell you. None of you can answer it?"
If they were looked down upon by the teachers collectively when they first came to the internship, it is estimated that the students in their two classes will become not so good students in the future due to the word-of-mouth communication from the clinical teachers.
"Tell me about it." The teacher pointed to Xie Wanying, because she was the first person to say that this was not an MRI film.
"Both MRI films and CT films are cross-sectional images, with contrasting colors ranging from black to white to show the structure of each tissue. However, the imaging principles are different. CT films reflect tissue electron density, X-ray attenuation coefficient, MRI films and
The distribution of hydrogen protons in tissues and organs is related. Fat tissue is black on CT films but white on MRI films. Bone cortex is very white on CT films but very dark on MRI films. If the teacher brings another MRI film of the same part, it will be different from the CT film.
Put two of them together and you can see the difference right away.”