Sunday, August 15, 2010

Final Clinical Post

As I was preparing to write this blog I was thinking about how far I have come in the past year. Last year at this time I was preparing to start my clinicals. I was nervous and unsure if I would really be able to learn it all. I had many frustrating days when I thought I would never be able to remember it all. Now I am able to scan on my own confidently. Even exams I have not done before I am able to understand the concept of the planes and ask questions prior to the patient arriving so I am able to scan confidently on my own. I never thought this would have been possible. I feel that I have learned a great deal and know that I will continue learning every day. I would still like to be able to identify pathology a better as well as recognize what additional scans our radiologists would like with certain pathology, but I know this will come in time. I am anxious now to take my boards in a few months!

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Clinical Experience

I made my first large mistake in MRI this week. I have scanned my first post arthrogram knee on Monday. I could tell there was fluid in the knee, and assumed that it was contrast. I scanned to entire protocol and let the patient go. The patient was a STAT read and had an immediate follow up appointment with his ordering doctor. I sent the images to the radiologist reading and called to let him know that I was sending him a STAT case. I changed the table coil and got my next patient dressed and positioned for their scan. When I came back to the scan computer I had a message. I listened to it and it was from the radiologist reading stating that there was no contrast in the knee and to call him back. He seemed irritated. I went and got the lead tech, asking that she come look at the images and explain how their wasn't contrast in the knee. She looked at the images and explained that on 3 of the series the fluid was not quite as bright at it should be, but that it was a tough one to tell because there was definitely fluid in the knee joint. I called the radiologist, and by this point he had already contacted the reffering office to let them know. He informed me that it was still a diagnostic exam and there was no need for the patient to return for additional imaging or re-injection. He wanted me to know that for future arthrograms what to look for. I was fortunate that he was very friendly and explained the situation without getting upset with me. I will definitely learn from my mistake!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

MRI CLINICALS

I had my first experience with a contrast reaction this week. Luckily it was not very severe, but it was still very scary. I had a patient in her early seventies for an ankle without and with contrast. I had to do several scans on her prior to contrast. I also had to do a GFR check on her to confirm her kidneys were function appropriately, and that she could have contrast. Her GFR came back within normal range. I injected 19cc of omniscan. During and immediately following the injection she stated she felt fine. I advanced her back into the scanner and left the scan room. After the first post contrast series ran, the patient squeezed the emergency ball. I asked her if she was alright, she said she was having trouble breathing and started coughing uncontrollably. I rushed into the room. I sent a co-worker to get out lead tech immediately. I brought the table to ground level and had to patient sit up. She said she felt her throat was swelling and she was having trouble breathing. At this time the lead tech, along with the other four techs in the building and the doctor entered the MRI area. The doctor said to bring the patient out of the scan room and he would evaluate her. He listened to her heart and breathing and said she was most likely having anxiety because she sounded fine. Even with this said we monitored her pulse and oxygen, and started an IV. We had oxygen ready next to her. The doctor administered 25mg of benadryl. The patient continued to feel swelling of her throat on and off. The radiologist reading the images was contacted because he was at a different center. He stated that he did not want us to finish the scan, he had adequate information to make a diagnosis. We continued to monitor the patient for 35 more minutes. We had her call a friend to drive her home and stay with her for several hours following her reaction. The patient felt fine but had slightly elevated blood pressure when we released her. I had to document everything as a patient incident report and send it to our HR department. While this was a minor reaction, it is very rare to even see a reaction in MRI. My lead tech has been scanning in MRI for over 10 years and this was only her second reaction she has seen. I hope that I will not see another one for at least 10 years, never again would be preferred.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

MRI CLINICALS

I scanned a brachial plexus yesterday. The patient received contrast for this exam because he had a history of a tumor removed from the lateral axillary area one year ago. Because of the location of the area of interest we had to increase our field of view, change our centering to lower and more lateral, and also increase the slices of many of the series. Our routine brachial plexus has very long scans to begin with, so when we began changing parameters the scans became even longer, some over six minutes. The patient was very cooperative. After contrast we ran scans in all three plains with additional fat saturated images in the coronal plane. From what I could tell the tumor had not returned. This was a good learning experience because it was not a typical brachial plexus. I had to use critical thinking to modify the scans to meet the needs of the radiologist, so that he could give an accurate diagnosis.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Clinical Experiences

Thinking back over the past few weeks, two exams stick out in my mind as memorable learning experiences. Those are elbow and soft tissue neck. Seems that in my past several months of clincicals I have not seen very many elbow exams. However, in the past month I have been able to scan several elbows. I have been fortunate enough that all my patients have been able to lay in the preferred position, on their back with their arm extended over head in a knee coil. With that said, just because their arms have all been in the same general position, the actual position of the elbow has varied in each exam. This is due to the ability to rotate the arm comfortably and also the individual anatomy of the patient. I always think back to my original learning experience with elbows- scanning an apple. This allows me to remember that just because my localizer may say that the anatomy is in a specific plane may not really mean it truly is in that plane. I have become comfortable differentiating the planes and setting up accordingly for each scan. I actually am starting to enjoy elbow scans and not be so nervous about them. Soft tissue neck was an exam that I had not seen or scanned in MRI until two weeks ago. I was able to review the scan set up and protocol with two experienced technologists the evening prior to the scan. While doing the scan I was the only MRI technologist in the building, which made me slightly nervous. Luckily because the patient received contrast, the radiologist was in the building, which happened to be the radiologist reading the exam. He was very friendly and willing to teach me about the lymph nodes and blood vessel being imaged and how to differentiate between them. He watched me set the scans up and explained why they were set up that way. I am grateful for his patience and his willingness to help me understand the scan.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Summer Clinicals Introduction

Hello. Looks like there is a combo of new and existing clinical students in this class. This is my final semster of clinicals. I work as a MRI tech and a special procedures tech at an outpatient imaging center in Greenwood. I am looking forward to finishing up my clinicals and taking my MRI registry this fall. As a requirement for my work I must take it by December. I wish everyone luck this semester!

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Clinical Experience

Looking back over this semester of clinicals, I realize how much I have learned and how my skills have developed. I am comfortable scanning a large variety of exams. I have learned to identify most anatomy and some pathology. I feel that because of my time spent scanning and the knowledge I have from procedures, I will be able to confidently take my MRI registry by the end of this year.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Clinical Experience

I have seem quite a bit of pathology in the past few weeks. One lady had severe discitis in her lumbar spine. She complained of low back pain for a few months and was sent to us by a chiropractor. The study was ordered without contrast, but after consulting with the radiologist we gave the patient contrast. I followed up with the radiologist to see what the next step would be to treat something like this. He said that she would definitely have to see back specialist instead of her chiropractor, and most likely would be put on oral medications or could have a biopsy to confirm the discitis before treatment was made.
Another case that I saw imaging from, but did not scan myself , was a 33 year old female who came in to have her hip scanned. She had been complaining of low back pain radiating into her hip since shoveling snow. She was seeing her chiropractor for her symptoms. The chiropractor sent her for an MRI of her lumbar spine (not at my facility) a few months ago when the symptoms started. This facility only ran T1 and T2 sagittal images. The MRI was dicatated as normal, negative for any pathology. Once the tech and my facility started scanning, she was seeing highlighting in the hip area. She contacted the radiologist on call to take a look at the imaging. The radiologist asked the technologist where the primary was, meaning primary cancer. The tech said that there was no primary known. I later spoke with the radiologist who showed me the images and explained that this women with no known history of cancer has mets in her spine, acetabulum, liver, and uterus. The worst part of this whole thing is that if the facility that imaged her originally would have run a flair, they would have been able to diagnose her several months ago, and maybe treated her before she has so many mets.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Clinical Experience

Treatment planning scans are something that my facility does for a local cancer center. The type of treatment the patients receive is called cyberknife. The majority of the scans that we do are brains, but sometimes we scan spines or abdomens for treatment planning as well. These cases make me very anxious. They are not hard scans, one sag for our radiologists benefit and then pre and post contrast T1 axial scans. Everything must be exact so that the treatment can be set up appropriately. We have done quite a few in the past few weeks. I am becoming more comfortable with the brain scans. The spine and abdomens I have only seen a few of. One patient this week had primary breast cancer with spine mets in the thoracic and cervical spine. She also had a syrinx. This was one of the worst cases of pathology that I have seen in MRI.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Clinical Experience

This week is my first week working without supervision in the MRI department. I closed last night by myself and will do the same on Friday. I worked Saturday with a tech named Erin who is new to CDI, but not new to MRI. I was supposed to have two elbows on my schedule last night (one cancelled and one did not show), which I do not feel 100% comfortable with. Since we didn't have any elbows on the schedule Saturday, Erin had me scan an apple. At first I thought it was a slightly crazy idea, but once we started I understood why. An apple is like any body part- it can be seen in three distinct planes. So scanning an apple was like scanning an elbow, I got a scout in all three planes and planned off those. Erin explained that each persons elbow would most likely be position slightly different in the coil, and that was okay as long as I could distinguish which plane I was looking at I could scan it without any problems. So as you can imagine I was highly disappointed last night when neither of my elbow patients came. Hopefully I will be able to scan an elbow later in the week.

Friday, January 29, 2010

MRI CLINICALS

This month has been my first month of full time MRI. I am really enjoying it. I have been working crazy hours to get training with ideal techs, but it is working and I'm starting to become comfortable with the chaos of my schedule. I originally accepted an evening tech position, but have now switched to a float hour position. I work a little bit of everything, but mostly day shifts. I am anxious to work alone because there are still things that I'm not comfortable with. I have not seen any abdomen, carotid, finger, toe, or tib/fib exams. I am now comfortable scanning alone for knees, shoulders, lumbar spine, cervical spine, ankles, feet, and hips. Brains make me a little anxious just because there are so many different protocols at my facility. It is up to the tech to be certain the correct series are completed and checked with the radiologists. I am becoming more comfortable giving contrast to patients because I have been working more day shift hours, which allows for more contrast exams. The plan is that within the next month I will be able to work on my own comfortably.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Second Semester Introduction

Hello, and hello again to many of you! I am Nichole Moline. I am 23 years old. I am an x-ray tech, training as an MRI tech at an out-patient imaging center in Greenwood,IN. I have worked for this company for 2.5 years as a special procedures tech. Starting in January I am training full time for a second shift MRI position. This is great because I now only spend 40 hours a week at work instead of 52.5 like I did last semester. I am taking 4 other classes this semster, in hopes to be finisshed with my bachelor's degree in December! In my free time (which I'm sure will be minimal again this semster, lol) I enjoy reading, running, hiking, camping, boating, gardening, and spending time with my wonderful family and friends. Good luck to everyone this semester!