Mayo Hospitals Supporters
Cat Scan Appeal
Calling Mayo People Worldwide
Costs
Despite having a modern hospital providing acute medical services the County of Mayo does not have a Cat Scanner. This results in many people from Mayo having to travel long distances to have a Cat scan performed. Some patients may be admitted to Mayo General Hospital and transferred to Dublin hospitals for a Cat scan and then return to Mayo General for treatment. This round trip may take up to 12 hours and provides a major amount of stress and discomfort to both patients and relatives.
A Cat Scanner costs approximately £450,000 and todate Mayo Hospitals Supporters have collected approximately £320,000 through local fundraising events. We hope to have the full sum collected by March 1998. .
Many thanks to all who have supported our appeal so far we hope to be able to have our Scanner up and working as soon as possible after the target is reached
What is a CAT scan?

A computerized axial tomography scan is more commonly known by its abbreviated name, CAT scan or Cat scan. It is an x-ray procedure which combines many x-ray images with the aid of a computer to generate cross-sectional views and, if needed, three-dimensional images of the internal organs and structures of the body. A CAT scan is used to define normal and abnormal structures in the body and/or assist in procedures by helping to accurately guide the placement of instruments or treatments. A large donut-shaped x-ray machine takes x-ray images at many different angles around the body. These images are processed by a computer to produce cross-sectional pictures of the body. In each of these pictures the body is seen as an x-ray "slice" of the body, which is recorded on a film. This recorded image is called a tomogram. "Computerized Axial Tomography" refers to the recorded tomogram "sections" at different levels of the body.
Imagine the body as a loaf of bread and you are looking at one end
of the loaf. As you remove each slice of bread, you can see the
entire surface of that slice from the crust to the center. The body
is seen on CAT scan slices in a similar fashion from the skin to the
central part of the body being examined. When these levels are
further "added" together, a three-dimensional picture of an organ or
abnormal body structure can be obtained.
Why are CAT scans performed?
CAT scans are performed to analyze the internal structures of various parts of the body. This includes the head, where traumatic injuries, (such as blood clots or skull fractures), tumors, and infections can be identified. In the spine, the bony structure of the vertebrae can be accurately defined, as can the anatomy of the intervertebral discs and spinal cord. Occasionally, contrast material (an x-ray dye) is placed into the spinal fluid to further enhance the scan and the various structural relationships. CAT scans are also used in the chest to identify tumors, cysts, or infections that may be suspected on a chest x-ray. CAT scans of the abdomen are extremely helpful in defining body organ anatomy, including visualizing the liver, gallbladder, pancreas, spleen, aorta, kidneys, uterus, and ovaries. CAT scans in this area are used to verify the presence or absence of tumors, infection, abnormal anatomy, or changes of the body from trauma.
The technique is painless and can provide extremely accurate images of body structures in addition to guiding the radiologist in performing certain procedures, such as biopsies of suspected cancers, removal of internal body fluids for various tests, and the draining of abscesses which are deep in the body. Many of these procedures are minimally invasive and have markedly decreased the need to perform surgery to accomplish the same goal.










