1st presentation- Red dotted.. but looks ? normal... |
......aha ! |
Assessment
Good care- a junior
doctor sought advice from a senior doctor
In the ‘old days’ of hard copy films, appropriately
trained radiographers would place a red dot sticker on films they thought
were abnormal. This was a safety feature to reduce the chances of anomalies
being missed. Digital images obviously cannot have stickers placed on them,
so radiographers now write ‘red dot’ on the image.
Just because a radiographer red dots a film does not mean
it is definitely abnormal, however it should raise your suspicion and make
you look ‘extra hard’
|
Recommendation
If you see a ‘red dot’ image double check and triple check the image AND
the patient
If you still cannot see what the radiographer seems to be
concerned about, go and ask them what
they think they are seeing, they might be wrong……………..but they might be right
Make sure you look at all the images taken. Only
one may show the abnormality.
http://radiopaedia.org/articles/tibial-plateau-fracture
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1249872-overview http://www.orthobullets.com/trauma/1044/tibial-plateau-fractures Unnecessary Additional Information The image of the radiologist reporting is a tad misleading- its a Sauropod fossil vertebra |