Patella Sunrise on Digital Radiography equipmentThis is a featured page

SunriseSetagast OR SunRiseSunrise2

Sunrise Axial Patella. No Table? No Problem.



With the transition to digital, many things are changing. Even how we approach positioning. In this situation our biggest challenge is that we do not have a table. This is a U arm Digital Radiography machine and the following is how we have approached to get a diagnostic axial patella view. Have the patient sit in a chair and make sure that back is all the way against the bucky. The tube should be at 72" from the bucky and there should be about a 10 degree tilt on the tube. Place a an object such as a stool in under the tube, and have the patient put the arches of their feet on it, forcing an adequate bend to the knees. The centering point is between the knees right at the level of the femoropatellar joint. Then, place the detector onto their lap and have them hold on to it at the top with both hands. Tip: Have them slightly tilt it forward, depending on how much angle you put on the tube. If all goes well, the femoropatellar joint is visualized clearly!

Does anyone else do this differently?



AndyC
AndyC
Latest page update: made by AndyC , Feb 8 2010, 2:38 AM EST (about this update About This Update AndyC Moved from: Radiography - AndyC

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jimgcooke Another table-free technique 1 Jun 28 2010, 6:18 AM EDT by jannewbgrl
Thread started: Jun 21 2010, 4:36 AM EDT  Watch
A good tableless technique for a less mobile patient is to get them to sit on a relatively high chair (the one pictured in the article would work if it was set to a higher position) with their knees flexed and their feet on the floor. The patient has to be sitting close to the edge of the chair to allow adiquate fexion of the knee joint. Then place an object such as a block, stool or step with the digital cassette on directly against their shins. The patients knees should be flexed back so the patella is directly over the cassette You can then use a straight, vertical tube pointing straight down and centered on the femoropatellar joint.

This has the added advantage of reducing the effective dose as the beam is pointed at the floor, not the patient.
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