DOI: 10.12809/hkmj166085
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
COMMENTARY
Tube shift or tube tilt? The terminology of
dental radiography is heterogeneous relative to
radiological convention
Andy WK Yeung, BDS
Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology, Applied Oral Sciences, Faculty of Dentistry, The University of Hong Kong, Sai Ying Pun, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Dr Andy WK Yeung (ndyeung@hku.hk)
Radiography and radiology are vital to the health care
profession, offering many non-invasive radiographic
techniques that provide detailed information about
what underlies superficial skin. Radiographic
findings combined with clinical information enable
clinicians to make an accurate diagnosis. For
two-dimensional radiographs, one easily notices
that the direction/orientation is crucial and must
not be mistaken. One example of a dichotomy in
orientation is ‘radiological’ versus ‘neurological’
conventions. In dentistry, we routinely view images
according to ‘radiological’ convention (‘right is left’),
as if we are looking at the patient face-to-face. On
the contrary, ‘neurological’ convention dictates that
‘right is right’, as commonly adopted for images from
neuroimaging studies such as functional magnetic
resonance imaging.1 This dichotomy is so renowned
that the images are usually labelled ‘radiological’
or ‘neurological’ convention when an article is
interdisciplinary.2
Occasionally, medical radiographs are an
eccentric projection instead of an orthoradial
projection. In other words, the X-ray beam comes
from an oblique direction. For example, when a
sternoclavicular joint injury is suspected, radiologists
may prescribe a serendipity view where the X-ray
beam is ‘tilted 40 degrees cephalic off vertical’ in
order to visualise the joint.3 4 To achieve the tilt, radiographers will shift/translate the whole tube
head in a caudal direction, and then rotate the tube
such that it points in a cephalic direction. It is easily
recognised that the direction is ‘tube tilt’, instead of
‘tube shift’. This convention was established after
Kitty Clark published the first edition of the famous
textbook, Clark’s positioning in radiography, in 19395
that has been widely used by students in the health
care sector.6
Eccentric projections are also useful in dental
radiography. In 1910, Charles Clark described the
famous ‘Clark rule’ to employ eccentric projections,
together with an orthoradial projection, to localise
un-erupted teeth. Albert Richards simplified the
procedure and renamed it the ‘buccal object rule’.7
In essence, the un-erupted tooth will move in an
opposite direction to the ‘tube shift’. This is also
widely taught as the ‘tube shift technique’ and ‘SLOB
(same side lingual, opposite side buccal) rule’.8 9
In this scenario one recognises that dentists, in
applying eccentric projections, respect the direction
of ‘tube shift’ whereas medical radiologists and
radiographers respect that of ‘tube tilt’. Confusion
may potentially arise when such communications
are interdisciplinary. When a radiographer takes
the eccentric projected images for the prescribing
dentist, they may have a different understanding
of the prescription of ‘shift’, be it ‘mesial shift
(equivalent to distal tilt)’ or ‘distal shift (equivalent
to mesial tilt)’, especially when there is limited or no
previous experience with dental radiography, such as
the situation in Hong Kong.
For example, to plan for surgical extraction of an
impacted upper right premolar tooth, a dentist may
prescribe a periapical radiograph with orthoradial
projection, and another one with ‘mesial shift’. If
the impacted premolar appears to move mesially in
the ‘shifted’ image, which is in the same direction
as the tube shift, one can see that the impacted
tooth is situated on the palatal side. If, however,
the radiographer who takes the images has limited
dental radiography knowledge, he/she may take the
eccentric projection in the opposite direction (‘mesial
tilt’). The prescribing dentist will then believe the
image is ‘mesially shifted’ and that the impacted tooth
moves distally, and is situated on the buccal side. This
may lead to surgery being performed on the wrong
side. The situation may be even more complicated
if a medical radiologist is involved in diagnosis and
treatment planning, such as in surgery to remove
a deeply impacted tooth or to resect one root of an
infected multi-rooted posterior tooth.
The above discussion highlights the
heterogeneity of domain languages and conventions
used by dentists and by medical doctors/radiographers. The former assumes that eccentric
projections are taken according to their prescription
that respects the direction of ‘shift’, but the latter may
take or interpret the eccentric projection images
with respect to the direction of ‘tilt’. Practitioners
and dental academic staff should be aware of this
discrepancy and avoid misunderstanding of the
prescription of radiographs. To minimise the risks,
the concepts of ‘tube shift’ and ‘tube tilt’ should
be explained and emphasised to radiology staff
wherever there is frequent cross-collaboration
between medicine and dentistry. Another way is to
apply the ‘tube shift technique’ with two different
imaging methods, for example, an occlusal view plus
a panoramic view, instead of a pair of periapical films
in ‘parallax’. As both occlusal and panoramic views
can be taken using standardised procedures, it is
unlikely anyone will misunderstand the direction of
the X-ray. In addition, the risk of misunderstanding
can be eliminated by the prescription of small-volume
three-dimensional imaging such as cone-beam
computed tomography, provided that it is
available and suitable. In future, it may be beneficial
to highlight such discrepancy in the terminology
during undergraduate teaching of radiography or
radiology.
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