DMSU 112 Sectional Anatomy for Imaging Professionals
This course is the study of cross-sectional normal and abnormal anatomy known as pathology. The course will demonstrate and educate students on the correlation of the study of cross-sectional anatomy. In this course, students will explore in-depth study of human anatomy in sagittal, coronal, transverse, and orthogonal sections essential to current techniques in diagnostic imaging.
Hours Weekly
3 hours weekly
Course Objectives
- 1. Compare and contrast the anatomical relationships of key anatomical structures.
- 2. Identify anatomical structures in the axial, sagittal, coronal, and oblique planes.
- 3. Differentiate between the anterior-posterior, superior-inferior, and lateral-medial relationships.
- 4. Distinguish between the different signal characteristics demonstrated with various pulse sequences on
each image. - 5. Compare the anatomical structure changes due to the pathology to normal anatomy.
- 6. Describe the impact contrast media will have on the human body.
Course Objectives
- 1. Compare and contrast the anatomical relationships of key anatomical structures.
- 2. Identify anatomical structures in the axial, sagittal, coronal, and oblique planes.
- 3. Differentiate between the anterior-posterior, superior-inferior, and lateral-medial relationships.
- 4. Distinguish between the different signal characteristics demonstrated with various pulse sequences on
each image. - 5. Compare the anatomical structure changes due to the pathology to normal anatomy.
- 6. Describe the impact contrast media will have on the human body.