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At present, when it comes to modern medical imaging examination, both doctors and patients can list a wide range of examination methods such as CR, DR, ULTRASOUND, CT, MRI, ECT, PET, etc.
Myth 1
MRI is preferred after acute brain trauma and stroke
Intracranial hemorrhage is common after traumatic brain injury, and it is easy to miss the bleeding by doing MRI immediately because fresh bleeding is not contrasted
Myth 2
Routine transcribed CT scan makes it easy to find nasal fractures
Nasal fractures are common, but due to the special anatomical site of the nasal bone, x-ray projection requirements are high and often difficult to meet clinical needs
Myth 3
Acute abdomen is preferred to take a flat abdominal standing position
It should be said that before the advent of CT, the abdominal standing and lying flat film was helpful in judging intestinal obstruction, cavity organ perforation, urinary stones, etc
Myth 4
Take a foot x-ray of ankle trauma
Inexperienced young doctors are prone to make this mistake
Myth 5
Elderly stool with blood for a full digestive tract barium meal examination
Experience has shown that the site of bloody lesions in the stool in the elderly is mostly in the colon
Myth 6
Routine transcribed CT scan of the skull to examine the pituitary microadenoma
Lesions that cause amenorrhea in women to lactate are often pituitary microadenomas