SPINAL CORD

Preparatory steps:
- Indications: tetraparesis, paraparesis, other neurological deficits and spinal cord compression syndrome when MRI is contra-indicated or not available. MRI is the examination of choice
- Advisable preliminary investigations: radiography of the spine and/or myelography
- Patient preparation: information about the procedure; restraint from food, but not fluid, is recommended, if intravenous contrast media are to be given
- Scan projection radiograph: frontal or lateral of all the suspected vertebral segments
1. DIAGNOSTIC REQUIREMENTS
Image criteria:
1.1 Visualization of
1.1.1 The entire region of suspected pathology
1.1.2 Vessels after intravenous contrast media
1.1.3 Spinal cord and nerve roots after intrathecal injection of contrast media (CT-myelography)
1.2 Critical reproduction
1.2.1 Visually sharp reproduction of spinal cord contours (CT-myelography)
1.2.2 Visually sharp reproduction of the thecal sac
1.2.3 Visually sharp reproduction of the perithecal fat
1.2.4 Visually sharp reproduction of the intervertebral disk profiles
1.2.5 Reproduction of the main vessels and perithecal venous plexuses after intravenous contrast media
1.2.6 Visually sharp reproduction of the intervertebral radicular canals
1.2.7 Visually sharp reproduction of the intervertebral joints
1.2.8 Reproduction of the paravertebral ligaments
1.2.9 Visually sharp reproduction of the paravertebral muscles
2. CRITERIA FOR RADIATION DOSE TO THE PATIENT
2.1 CTDIW : no specific value as yet available (for information: routine chest or abdomen: 30/35 mGy)
2.1 DLP : no specific value as yet available (for information: routine chest or abdomen: 650/800 mGy cm)
3. EXAMPLES OF GOOD IMAGING TECHNIQUE
3.1 Patient position : supine, legs in flexion
3.2 Volume of investigation : from 1 cm above to 1 cm below suspected pathology
3.3 Nominal slice thickness : 2-5 mm
3.4 Inter-slice distance/pitch : contiguous or a pitch = 1.0
3.5 FOV : spine dimension
3.6 Gantry tilt : none (allow easy production of reformatted images)
3.7 X-ray tube voltage (kV) : standard or high kV in large persons to avoid noise
3.8 Tube current and exposure time product (mAs) : should be as low as consistent with required image quality
3.9 Reconstruction algorithm : soft tissue/standard or high resolution
3.10 Window width : 140-400 HU (soft tissue)
2000-3000 HU (bones)
250-300 HU (cervical spine)
3000-4000 HU (CT-myelography)
3.11 Window level : 30-40 HU (soft tissue)
200-400 HU (bones)
25-35 HU (cervical spine)
400-600 HU (CT-myelography)
3.12 Protective Shielding : lead-purse for the male gonads if the edge of the volume of investigation is less than 10-15 cm away
4. CLINICAL CONDITIONS WITH IMPACT ON GOOD IMAGING PERFORMANCE
4.1 Motion - movement artefact deteriorates image quality (prevented by sedation of non-cooperative patients)
4.2 Intravenous contrast media - useful to identify vascular structures and enhancing lesions
4.3 Problems and pitfalls - foreign bodies (beam hardening artefacts)
  - calcifications versus contrast enhancement
4.4 Modification to technique - intrathecal injection of contrast medium (CT-myelography) to delineate the spinal cord and nerve roots
  - production of reformatted images of adequate quality may require thin serial slices if helical CT is not available