Radiology Database - B - p8 •
The bisecting angle technique (or bisect angle geometry) is used for radiographic examinations of the teeth. The central axis of the x-ray beam is positioned at right angles to a plane determined by bisecting the angle formed by the long axis of the teeth being imaged, and the plane in which the image receptor is positioned behind the teeth. See also Bitewing Radiograph. •
The basic unit of information. Definition: The smallest unit of information in the storage on a computer. Eight bits are grouped together to form one byte, additional start and stop bit. Larger units are kilobyte (kB) = 1 000 bytes (computer storage 1024 bytes) megabyte (MB) = 1 000 kB (computer storage 1024 kB) See also Bit Range, Binary System, Decimation, Digitization, Sampling Rate and Picture Archiving and Communication System. • View NEWS results for 'Bit' (4). • •
A bitewing radiograph is an intraoral device that demonstrates the crowns, necks and coronal thirds of the roots of both upper and lower teeth. The imaged person bites upon a tab or wing projecting from the center of the image-receptor packet. See also Bisecting Angle Technique. •
The intact blood brain barrier prevents that contrast agents penetrate in the normal brain tissue. If the blood brain barrier is damaged by a malignant tumor, the contrast medium can accumulate within the interstitial tumor tissue due to the alterations in the blood brain barrier permeability. Adjacent normal brain tissue does not contain the contrast agent.
|