Sign in or 

| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Aug 17 2010, 12:18 AM EDT | lalidam97 | 128 words added, 8 words deleted |
| May 1 2009, 10:05 AM EDT | AndyC | 52 words added, 62 words deleted, 1 photo added, 1 photo deleted |
| Weight Bearing Dorsoplantar (DP) view Dorso-plantar projection or Anterior-Posterior (AP) weightbearing The patient stands erect on the cassette in the normal and base of gait Use a single 10x12 for both feet - two on one Central Ray
|
| Medial Oblique View The patient stands erect on the cassette in the normal and base of gait make sure pt is standing - foot of interest on a 10x12 and the other foot just next to it to evenly distribute weight. Central Ray
|
| Lateral Weightbearing View The patient stands on an Orthoposer box, that elevates the foot enough so that the X-ray beam can be angled 90° from vertical, and the central ray directed to the base of the metatarsals. The cassette is inserted into a slot in the orthoposer to hold it in position. - no devise like this one here, laterals shot medial-lateral instead, with cassette up against bucky. Central Ray
Joints visualised:
|
| Axial calcaneal weightbearing Also known as Harris and Beath (Coalition View) The patient stands erect on the cassette in the normal and base of gait DR LATT - will order these, always do both heels. Have pt bend knee to get in almost a squat position-open up collimation you must see light over calf - this will give them the tib/fib shot they need to measure - ALSO CALLED ALIGNMENT VIEW. Central Ray
|
| Axial calcaneal The patient lays supine on the X-ray table with the cassette under the heelheel, have pt pull back toes as much possible with a bandage strip - this will get the joint visualized. Central Ray
Bones visualised
|
| Axial sesamoid nonweightbearing Patient is positioned prone on the X-ray table with the cassette placed beneath the foot Central Ray
Joint visualised
|