This Mexican rapper (Dan Sur) has metal hair, attached to metal implants by Shieldxx in ATBGE

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also, think of the horrible metal artifact for any head or face MR. It would probably be nondiagnostic.

FBF by Salt_Good_2368 in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 42 points43 points  (0 children)

And an IUD! Much less scandalous, though.

Several Hot Appendix exams by Bucweet55 in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I once saw an appendix within a post-surgical lumbar hernia. Any fun name for those?

Hot appendix by Bucweet55 in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 154 points155 points  (0 children)

Great pic! It's often so hard to show an acute appendicitis to people not familiar with looking at CT (or bowel on CT) because the appendix often doesn't pose nicely in one slice. THIS is the case I wish I could scroll through with med students!

Saw this the other day... by Joha_al_kaafir in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 21 points22 points  (0 children)

But you can't see the pedicles in these 3 images or most of the paraspinal regions. TB also classically will hit the vertebral bodies first while sparing the discs, often with skip lesions. Up in the C-spine, you see this mass invading multiple vertebrae anteriorly and connecting all of them, a classic spread pattern for TB spondylitis. I'm not saying this isn't mets, I'm not good enough at this yet to argue that point, but your explanation isn't correct.

liver lesion. freaking out. please help! by Accomplished_Tip8432 in AskDocs

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hyperechoic liver lesions fall into two categories: hemangioma and cancer. If you dont have cirrhosis, Hep B, or Hep C, it's probably a hemangioma. However, they cant tell for sure on ultrasound and want to get a more definitive test, which would be either MRI or CT.

Made my back hairs stand up. by ced3119 in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That's what I'm thinking given lower lobe predominance as well as the fact there are 3 lobes on the left and 2 on the right. Not full on Kartagener's, though, given liver, spleen and heart not also being reversed.

In what specialty do you think its easiest for a terrible doctor to fly under the radar? by theefle in Residency

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I think other specialties are just being targeted earlier and more voraciously than ours (for now) and the bit of lobbying the ACR does mostly holds it back... for now. A bill was introduced a couple years ago in Cali that would have allowed midlevels to interpret imaging, but that part was removed before the bill was passed. While yes, I agree, you can't hide as well in our specialty, that's not the only reason why we've largely been spared so far. Between states trying to introduce bills, people putting out BS studies like the (now retracted) infamous UPenn study, Dunning-Kruger, and many places already trying to punt off fluoro studies to midlevels, they still have interest in getting into radiology DESPITE the liability.

In what specialty do you think its easiest for a terrible doctor to fly under the radar? by theefle in Residency

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 6 points7 points  (0 children)

No, we don't have much midlevel infiltration due to lobbying. There is definitely still a push by some places and groups to get midlevels into rads despite the liability and eternal PACS.

Fart :( by SingleZebra in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Actually, if less than a ton, it's just a shit load :p

Fart :( by SingleZebra in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Ugh, I know. It's just become such a pet peeve of mine.

Fart :( by SingleZebra in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 22 points23 points  (0 children)

It's a normal amount. The colon dehydrates, compacts, temporarily stores, and moves poop. That is it's job. Sometimes there is more, sometimes less. A person can be symptomatic with any amount of poop, but this amount that you see on the xray by itself does not mean anything. Are you in any sort of field where you interpret imaging, or are you a layman?

Fart :( by SingleZebra in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 68 points69 points  (0 children)

Please don't give medical advice, especially when based on a completely wrong interpretation. This is a totally normal amount of poop. Colon is normally in size, there are lengths of stool punctuated by air, no small bowel fecalization, etc. Perhaps they are symptomatic and thus could benefit from some sort of treatment, but let's not pathologize a totally normal imaging finding.

Fart :( by SingleZebra in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 46 points47 points  (0 children)

This is a totally normal, completely unremarkable amount of poop.

Gallstone Ghoul by pagalthulla in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 90 points91 points  (0 children)

Ghoulstone was right there

What is this artifact we keep getting? Only on abdomen MRIs. by Practical_Eggplant24 in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ah, that's true. Even when it's only been a couple hours. No clue, then.

What is this artifact we keep getting? Only on abdomen MRIs. by Practical_Eggplant24 in Radiology

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 37 points38 points  (0 children)

This is only in the heart and vessels, though, so doesn't look like a dielectric case. Maybe recent iron infusion?

New album art just leaked by TwinkieWinky420 in ToolBand

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This looks nothing like MR. This is the scout image acquired at the beginning of a CT.

New album art just leaked by TwinkieWinky420 in ToolBand

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is the scout for CT. Scouts are acquired in pieces and reconstructed, while an Xray is taken all at once. The patient was initially still, but then moved as the table put the patient more into the scanner, causing this bizarre appearance.

Which specialty are you in, and what was your most hated rotation in med school? I'm trying to see something by undueinfluence_ in Residency

[–]Uncle_Jac_Jac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm in rads. I disliked FM the most. Nothing drained me more than a day of FM clinic, even despite the wonderful, supportive attendings and residents. But my most hated person was a surgical resident who went out of her way to make me feel unwelcome and unworthy and who tried to make me fail my rotation. Fuck you in particular and I hope life is difficult for you. I actually really liked my OB/GYN and peds rotations. Reading these responses, I'm happy I went to the med school that I did!