Friday, May 25, 2012

What Happens During a Fracture X-ray Test




There are a lot of X-ray centers now all over the world. But the best center of X-ray gives you the exact report about your injury. Then a question arises about how we can determine the right center. The answer to this is to check all the information about the center or the degree of the doctor assigned to read the X-ray results. Usually, the doctor’s qualifications would be written on the board of the doctor’s clinic. Then check the person who is doing your X-ray and make sure to know if he is qualified to handle the X-ray machine or not.

The patient is asked to keep as still as possible for the few seconds it takes for each image to be obtained. The procedure is entirely painless and there are no side effects. The pictures are checked for technical quality by the radiographer and then sent off to the radiologist for reporting.

The X-rays are produced by an electrical machine and the patient stands between the machine and a special screen used for obtaining the image. Patients are asked to remove any metal objects, such as watches and jewelers, which might appear on the picture and cause confusion. In the time of complex examinations this process take a few hours so the official result of the test is not usually available immediately. In the time of X-ray, there is nothing taken from the body. It is only the image taken to know more about the bone fractures in the patient’s body.

Doctors can only make a firm diagnosis of what type of fracture there is, where the broken bone is located, how much is the extent of the injury, and such after an X-ray test. This is why this test is critical to determining the patient’s treatment.

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