Radiography, known to most people as X-ray, is the oldest and most frequently used form of medical imaging. For nearly a century, diagnostic images have been created by passing small, highly controlled amounts of radiation through the human body, capturing the resulting shadows and reflections on a photographic plate. X-ray imaging is the fastest and easiest way for a physician to view and assess broken bones, cracked skulls and injured backbones. X-rays also play a key role in orthopaedic surgery and the treatment of sports injuries.
We offer the following diagnostic x-ray procedures:
Upper extremities
- Hand
- Wrist
- Forearm
- Elbow
- Humerus
- Shoulder
- Clavicle
- Scapula
- Bone Age
- Dexa Bone Density Study
Lower extremities
- Foot
- Ankle
- Knee
- Femur
- Hip
- Os Calsis
- Long Bones
Head
- Skull
- Orbits
- Nasal Bones
- Eye for Foreign Body
- TMJ
- Zygoma
- Maxilla
- Mastoids
- Mandible
- Sinuses
- Sella Turcica
- Panorex
Thorax (Chest) x-ray
- Chest
- Sternum
- Acromioclavicular joints
- Sternoclavicular joints
- Mammogram
- Ribs
- Chest Decubitus study
- Apical Lordotic Chest X-ray
- Portable chest X-Ray
- Cardiac Series with Barium
- Cardiac Series without Barium
- Chest X-Ray expiration only
- Chest Inspiration and Expiration
- Chest X-Ray both Obliques
Abdominal x-ray
- KUB
- Obstructive Series
- Mouth to Anus
- Fetal Age
- Pelvis
Spine x-rays
- Cervical spine
- Thoracic Spine
- Lumbosacral Spine
- Coccyx-sacrum
- Sacroiliac Joints
- Soft Tissue Neck
- Scoliosis Series
- Bone Survey
- Pre-shock Spine
- Pelvis/hips Infant Dysplasia
- Cervical Myelogram
- Lumbar Spine flexion and Extension
- Thoracic Myelogram
- Cervical Spine Flexion and Extention
- Lumbar Myelogram
- Lumbar Puncture
- Entire Spine Myelogram