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Located on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, MAKIMAGING is a community-based diagnostic radiology practice specializing in the widest range of imaging modalities using state of the art
equipment including:
 
sageata CT 64-Detector Scan and CT Angiography
sageata 1.5T MRI
sageata PET/CT
sageata Ultrasound
sageata Nuclear Medicine (Scintigraphy)
sageata GI Radiology
sageata Digital Mammography
sageata Bone Densitometry (DEXA)
sageata General Diagnostic Radiology
sageata Women's Imaging


Contact :
Office locations:
165 East 84th St.
tel: 212 535 9770
fax:212 988 1520

MAP
click here for location

 +MRI

+CT SCAN

+ULTRASOUND/SONOGRAM

+PET/CT


MRI

+What is an MRI?
+What are the advantages of MRI?
+Are there any contraindications we need to know about?
+How does the patient prepare for the exam?
+What will the exam be like?
+How long will the exam take?
+When will the patient know the results?


Q. What is an MRI?

A. Magnetic Resonance Imaging, or MRI, is a patient examination utilizing a magnetic field and radio waves to produce a highly view of the inside of any portion of your body. It is a painless and extremely safe procedure because no radiation is used. Aided by a computer, MRI is able to produce an image of bone and soft tissue from many different body angles or planes. This enables our physicians to quickly and precisely diagnose a wide variety of conditions.

Q. What are the advantages of MRI?

A. Some of the advantages of MRI are:

Earlier detection of disease or injury, making earlier treatment possible.
No exposure to X-rays or radioactive substances.
It is painless, accurate, quick and safe. There are no known side effects.


Q. When scheduling an appointment, are there certain conditions we need to know about?

A. Please advise the technologist if you have any of the following:

A pacemaker
Are pregnant, or suspect that you may be
Have aneurysm clips.
Have had heart or brain surgery.
Have any metal fragments in your eyes.
Have shrapnel in your body.
Suffer from claustrophobia.
Weigh 300 lbs. or more.


Q. How does a patient prepare for the exam?

A. Patients should continue with their normal activities, eat light meals, and take any prescribed medications as usual. If possible avoid wearing clothes that have metal buckles, buttons or zippers. Do not use hair spray or eye makeup and please bring your insurance information with you along with any previous X-rays or imaging studies of the area to be examined.

Q. What will the exam be like?

A. The patient will be met by our MRI technologist who will be performing the examination. The technologist has completed a rigorous course of education and training, and they work under close supervision of the radiologist to assure the most accurate results from your examination.

The technologist will position and secure the patient on the imaging table. It is important that the patient be secured, because even the slightest movement during the exam can blur the image and result in the need for repeated scans.

The technologist will have the patient in full view at all times during the examination, they will be in constant communication via a two-way microphone. The patient will not feel a thing, but may hear the hum of the equipment as the images are being produced.

The patient may be given a contrast medium to highlight a particular part of the body. The contrast medium outlines less dense, hollow vessels and organs for visualization. This medium is eliminated within a few hours or a day or two depending on the area under examination and the type of contrast medium used.

Q. How long will the exam take?

A. The exam usually takes from 30 to 60 minutes. Time may vary significantly, depending on the nature of the study and other factors.

Q. When will the patient know the results?

A.The radiologist will study your films and report the findings to the referring physician within 24 hours. The referring physician will discuss the MRI results with the patient.

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CT/CAT SCAN


+What is a CT scan?
+What will the exam be like?
+What is contrast for CT and MR ?

+What is a contrast media?
+How long will the exam take?
+When will the patient know the results?

+How do you decide whether to use CT or MR for a given problem?


Q. What is a CT Scan?

A. CT stands for Computerized Tomography, which refers to the way this exam is performed. A CT scan is an X-ray procedure which is enhanced by a computer. This enhancement results in a three-dimensional view (referred to as a "slice") of a particular part of the body.

During a routine X-ray, dense tissues can block other areas. Aided by the computer, a CT scan is able to put together the different "slices" and create a three-dimensional view, clearly showing both bone and soft tissue.

Q. What will the exam be like?

A. The patient will meet with a CT technologist whose primary concern is the patient’s care and well-being. Our technologists have completed a rigorous course of education and training, and they work under close supervision of our radiologists to assure the most accurate results from the examination.

Prior to the start of the CT exam the technologist will explain the procedure to the patient. This is done for two reasons; to put the patient at ease as to what is taking place and ask for the patient’s cooperation. After the explanation is completed, the patient is positioned and secured on the examination table. It is important for the patient to be secured, because even the slightest movement can blur the picture and result in the need for repeated scans. Once the patient is secured, they are moved into the scanner. The scanner is a small air-conditioned chamber. The technologist will have the patient in full view at all times and be in constant communication via two-way microphones. During the time in the scanner, the patient will hear the humming of the equipment as it produces images. The patient may also feel slight movement of the table as it prepares for the next scan.

Q. What is contrast for CT and MR ?

A.
Any material administered to patients prior to or during an exam such as CT or MR to improve the identification or visibility of a structure or abnormality .
Oral contrast, given by mouth, consists of dilute barium or iodinated compound which is meant to fill and distend the small bowel primarily. Oral contrast may require a delay of approximately 45 minutes in order for it to take full effect, to allow for the contrast to travel through the length of the bowel. Oral contrast may also include bicarbonate pellets ("fizzies") that release CO2 in the stomach to "open up" the stomach for better analysis.
Intravenous contrast, either iodine for CT or a Gadolinium compound for MR, helps to analyze the solid organs, liver, spleen, pancreas and kidneys, as well as help characterize certain abnormalities and "masses" in the musculoskeletal and central nervous systems. The analysis of blood vessels and vascular structures also most often requires contrast.
Contrast may also be given through the rectum, if necessary, (in the form of air, CO2 or liquid contrast) to distend and better analyze parts of the colon.
The decision to use contrast is based on: the type of examination requested, the presumed diagnosis, (or diagnosis of exclusion) and information from the patient history or discussion with the referring physician. Most often, the final decision to use contrast is made by the radiologist, after determining that contrast use would be both safe and effective for the given patient.

Q. What is a contrast media?

A. This substance is given to highlight various body parts and is eliminated in a day or two. It is usually given by mouth or injection. It is normal for the patient to feel a warm sensation as the dye makes it way through their body.

Q. How long will the exam take?

A. The exam usually takes from 30 to 60 minutes. This allows for preparation as well as time for the computer to generate the image. Exam time may vary significantly depending on the nature of the study and other factors.

Q. When will the patient know the results?

A. The radiologist will study your films and report the findings to the referring physician within 24 hours. The referring physician will discuss the CT scan results with the patient.


Q. How do you decide whether to use CT or MR for a given problem?


A. Each modality has its advantages and limitations, which differ from one organ system to another.  Part of a radiologist's job, in consultation with the referring physician, is to help choose the safest ,most effective means of evaluating a specific patient . This  includes radiology-based  vs. non-radiological laboratory testing, and choosing among the various imaging examinations, CT, MR, Ultrasound, Scintigraphy and fluoroscopy/X-ray.

Generally speaking, MR is most useful for neurological and musculoskeletal applications, due to its high sensitivity to subject contrast i.e. ability to discriminate between different types of  solid tissue, both normal and abnormal. MR uses no X-rays, and may require an intravenous injection of Gadolinium contrast.

CT is a computerized X-ray procedure with advantages related to spatial  resolution,(i.e.  in the submillimeter range) , freezing of physiologic motion, and detection of calcium. CT is well suited to the lungs, coronary arteries and gastrointestinal and urinary tract . CT applications often require the use of intravenous iodine contrast.
MR is also useful for evaluating  solid organs , to clarify indeterminate thoraco-abdominal CT or ultrasound findings.  MR can also be substituted for CT in certain situations, such as  patients with allergy to iodine contrast , pediatric or young patients in whom repeated exposure to X-rays and CT could be of concern.


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ULTRASOUND/SONOGRAM

  • What is ultrasound?
  • What is a SCANOGRAM ?
  • What will the exam be like?
  • How long will the exam take?
  • How will the patient learn the results?

Q. What is ultrasound?

A. Ultrasound is the use of sound waves to obtain a medical image or picture of various organs and tissues in the body. It is a painless and safe procedure.

Ultrasound produces very precise images of your soft tissue (heart, blood vessels, uterus, bladder, etc.) and reveals internal motion such as heart beat and blood flow. It can detect diseased or damaged tissues, locate abnormal growths and identify a wide variety of changing conditions including fetal development, which enables our physicians to make a quick and accurate diagnosis.

Q. What is a SCANOGRAM ?

A.
An X-ray examination performed using the X-ray tube and digital detectors of a CT scanner,to obtain digital X-ray images of multiple contiguous portions of the bony skeleton.
Advantages: Requires fewer "takes"spacing, and allows easier and faster postionning for a shorter, more comfortable examination. Useful for surveying the entire skeleton for asymptomatic misalignments, limb length discrepancies, compression fractures of the spine, or lytic (destructive) bony lesions.
Limitations: Smaller bones and joints, and conditions requiring a spatial higher resolution ("sharper detail") still require a conventional X-ray machine and film technique.

Q. What will the exam be like?

A. The technologist performing the ultrasound study is known as a sonographer. All our technologists are highly skilled and educated. The technologists work under close supervision with our radiologists. Our radiologists will monitor the exam to assure that the most accurate results are obtained from your examination.

The technologist will assist the patient onto the examination table. An oil or transmission gel will be applied to the area of the body that will be examined. A transducer will be moved slowly over the body part being imaged. The transducer sends a signal to an on-board computer which processes the data and produces the ultrasound image. It is from this image that the diagnosis is made.

Q. How long will the exam take?

A. The exam usually takes from 30 to 60 minutes, depending upon the anatomy under study. The patient may be required to drink water to enhance the quality of the picture (sound travels better through water) and this could extend the time of the exam.

Q. When will the patient know the results?

A. The radiologist will study your films and report the findings to the referring physician within 24 hours. The referring physician will discuss the ultrasound results with the patient.

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PET/CT  

How is a PET scan performed ?

Performing an actual PET scan involves having the patient recline on a table that slides into the middle of an "open-air" scanner.  Within the scanner are rings of detectors containing special crystals that produce light when struck by radiation. The examination itself takes approximately 25 minutes. The information obtained is then reconstructed into cross-sectional images . During PET/CT ,the newest form of PET scanning, an abbreviated CT examination is performed simultaneously with the PET study, improving the accuracy.

What is the injection ?

 The patient is injected in a vein with a trace dose of radioactive biochemical (radiopharmaceutical)material approximately 45 minutes before the PET scan. The scanner's electronics record detected gamma rays and maps an image of the area where the radiopharmaceutical is concentrated.  Since the radiopharmaceutical is comprised of a chemical commonly processed by the body's metabolism, like sugar, PET enables the physician to detect the location of the metabolic process.  As an example, a PET study, using fluro-deoxyglucose (FDG) as the radioisotope, will demonstrate where increased glucose uptake is occurring, thereby detecting  certain types of hypermetabolic tumor spread, often even before the spread is visible on standard CT or MRI exams.

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e-mail: mail@makimaging.com