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RD7.5 | Imaging in Paediatrics — Graded Quiz
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Children are deliberately imaged with less ionising radiation than adults. Which TWO physiological facts are the principal reasons captured by the 'image gently' / ALARA principle in paediatrics?
Correct. Children have more actively dividing (radiosensitive) cells and a longer life expectancy over which a radiation-induced malignancy can develop, making them more radiosensitive. This underpins ALARA / 'image gently' — prefer USG and MRI and minimise CT.
Paediatric radiosensitivity = rapidly dividing cells + long latency window. ALARA / image gently: prefer USG/MRI, minimise CT and unnecessary radiographs.
Children are MORE radiosensitive than adults because of rapidly dividing cells plus a long remaining lifespan for a cancer to manifest. This is exactly why ALARA / 'image gently' favours USG and MRI over ionising studies.
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A 2-year-old has clinically diagnosed uncomplicated community-acquired pneumonia and is well and feeding. A junior colleague asks why no chest radiograph was ordered. What is the single best justification?
Correct. In uncomplicated clinical pneumonia in a well child the diagnosis is clinical; a routine radiograph does not change management and therefore only adds radiation. Imaging is reserved for deterioration, doubt or suspected complications.
Order imaging only when the result will change management. In a well child with clinical pneumonia, withholding the film is the correct, radiation-sparing decision.
The justification is pedagogically central: uncomplicated pneumonia is a clinical diagnosis, and a routine film changes nothing while adding radiation. Radiographs are neither contraindicated nor uniformly false-negative — they are simply unnecessary here.
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A 3-year-old with confirmed pneumonia develops persistent high fever and a large right pleural collection. Ultrasound shows multiple septations within the fluid. How should these findings most appropriately change management?
Correct. Septations on ultrasound indicate a complicated, loculated parapneumonic effusion/empyema unlikely to clear with antibiotics alone — this changes management towards drainage, intrapleural fibrinolytics, or surgical (VATS) referral. USG, not CT, characterises the septations.
USG septations distinguish a complicated/loculated empyema (needs drainage ± fibrinolytics/VATS) from a simple effusion. The imaging finding directly drives the intervention.
Septated pleural fluid on USG = a complicated, loculated empyema. This is precisely the finding that escalates management to drainage ± fibrinolytics or surgery; it is not a normal or simple effusion, and USG (not routine CT) is the modality that reveals it.
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In a child with suspected foreign body aspiration but a cooperative-age limitation, which radiographic technique is most useful to UNMASK air-trapping when a standard inspiratory film looks normal?
Correct. Expiratory films — or lateral decubitus views in an uncooperative toddler — accentuate air-trapping: the obstructed lung fails to deflate and stays hyperinflated, with mediastinal shift away. These manoeuvres reveal indirect signs when the standard film is normal.
Expiratory / lateral decubitus views accentuate air-trapping in FB aspiration — the obstructed lung stays inflated when the rest deflates. Essential when the inspiratory film is normal.
Air-trapping is unmasked by expiratory views (or decubitus views in a young child) because the obstructed lung cannot deflate. Lordotic, swimmer's, and penetrated views do not address the ball-valve air-trapping mechanism.
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A 9-month-old infant has had two febrile UTIs and an ultrasound showing a duplex collecting system. The team wants to determine whether the kidneys have suffered cortical damage / scarring after pyelonephritis. Which investigation specifically answers this question?
Correct. DMSA scintigraphy is the test for cortical integrity — it detects acute pyelonephritic change and established cortical scarring, and gives differential (split) function. Ultrasound assesses anatomy and MCUG assesses reflux; neither reliably grades cortical scarring.
DMSA = cortex (scarring/pyelonephritis + split function). USG = anatomy; MCUG = reflux. Choose the tool by the exact question being asked.
Cortical scarring/pyelonephritis is answered by DMSA scintigraphy, which also gives split function. Ultrasound is for anatomy and MCUG for reflux — they do not reliably demonstrate cortical scars.
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A 5-year-old child presents with a single, typical, lower-tract UTI (dysuria, frequency) that responds promptly to antibiotics, with no fever and no atypical features. According to age- and risk-based (NICE/ISPN) protocols, what is the most appropriate imaging approach?
Correct. Imaging in paediatric UTI is selective, driven by age and risk. A single typical lower-tract UTI in an older child that responds promptly does not need routine imaging. Younger, febrile (upper-tract), atypical or recurrent UTIs are the ones investigated — sparing radiation and resources.
Image selectively by age and risk: younger, febrile (upper-tract), atypical or recurrent UTIs are imaged; a single typical lower-tract UTI that responds promptly is not.
The principle is selective, risk-based imaging. A single typical lower-tract UTI in an older child that responds promptly needs no routine imaging; investigation is reserved for younger, febrile, atypical or recurrent cases. Imaging everyone wastes radiation and resources.
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