Abstract

Image-guided procedures play a critical role in the clinical practice of radiologists. Training radiology residents in these procedures, with early teaching of basic but fundamental skills, is therefore crucial to develop competence before they become autonomous and start their practice. It has been proposed in the literature that low-fidelity phantoms are appropriate to teach novice trainees. The authors propose a series of phantoms to teach the core skills necessary to perform procedures early in resident training. The phantoms described can be used to train skills necessary for performing US-guided biopsy, US-guided vascular puncture, cone-beam CT drainage, and fluoroscopy-guided lumbar puncture, as well as using the parallax effect to determine relative position at fluoroscopy. Phantoms are a valuable training tool, although it is important to consider the teaching audience when choosing or creating a model. For novices, a range of inexpensive low-fidelity gelatin-based phantoms can be used to train core skills in image-guided procedures. The online slide presentation from the RSNA Annual Meeting is available for this article. ©RSNA, 2021.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call