X Rays and Untra sound
Tell a doctor about it if you think its bad. It doesn't sound like you have to worry about this.
Yes as long as it has no metal in it. If it has any metal then no, as an MRI is like a giant magnet.
an MRI
an MRI
Technically, no. An acronym is a new word made from the initials of other words like 'WHO' for the world health organisation. "MRI" is an abbreviation, not an acronym. MRI stands for 'Magnetic Resonance Imaging'.
I would look at schools like ITT Tech and DeVry. Sanford Brown has a great MRI school.
There are different types of MRI devices, however, one of the biggest and most common things that would disqualify a patient getting an MRI would be metal in the body. Surgical pins, staples in the stomach and the like.
CT scanning uses radiation while MRI does not
MRI uses short bursts of radio, at frequencies of a few tens to a few hundreds of Megahertz. Exactly the same radiation that comes out of an ordinary TV transmitter, but in short bleeps, and without any sound or picture modulation on it.
If the MRI technologist positions you with your leg going into the magnet (the MRI machine) then your head would be out of it. Call the facility where you are scheduled to have the MRI and ask to speak with the MRI technologist and they can fully explain to you exactly how you will be positioned.
MRI Magnetic Resonance Imaging. An MRI does not use dangerous radiation like an X-ray does. It is just a powerful magnetic field that (so far) hasn't been associated with any deliberating effect.