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Health and Safety

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Evaluate the consequent health hazards and identify the ... Fume cupboards. Waste. Protective clothing. Long handled tongs. Finger radiation monitors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health and Safety


1
Health and Safety
2
  • Explain how X- and ?-radiations damage cells
    through ionisation.
  • Evaluate the consequent health hazards and
    identify the radiological protection measures
    taken in an X- and ?-ray imaging and radiotherapy
    treatment areas, to monitor and minimise the dose
    received by staff and the damage done to healthy
    tissue of patients half-thickness value of lead
    screening used.

3
How are cells damaged?
4
Effects of irradiationshort term
  • Radiation sickness
  • Blood changes
  • Vomiting, fatigue
  • Hair loss
  • Damage to gastro-intestinal tract
  • Damage to CNS- death in hours
  • Spasmodic seizures
  • Radiation burns
  • Birth defects of unborn children

5
Effects of irradiation long term
  • Leukaemia
  • Cancer
  • Cataract formation
  • Life shortening

6
Radiological protection
  • Principle of justificationsThe benefits of using
    radiation must outweigh the drawbacks.
  • Principle of optimisation (ALARA principle, As
    Low As Reasonably Achievable)Radiation exposure
    caused by the use of radiation must be kept as
    low as reasonably achievable.
  • Principle of limitationExposure of  radiation
    workers and individuals of public must not exceed
    dose limits.

7
Film badge
8
  • 1.) An open window which allows all incident
    radiation that can penetrate the film
  • wrapping to interact with the film. This allows
    for the film serial number to be
  • displayed.
  • 2.) A thin plastic filter which attenuates beta
    radiation but passes all other
  • radiations.
  • 3.) A thick plastic filter which passes all but
    the lowest energy photon radiation and
  • absorbs all but the highest energy beta
    radiation.
  • 4.) A dural filter which progressively absorbs
    photon radiation at energies below 65
  • KeV as well as beta radiation.
  • 5.) A tin/lead filter of a thickness which allows
    energy independent dose response of the film over
    the photon energy range 75 KeV to 2MeV.
  • 6.) A cadmium/lead filter where the capture of
    neutrons by cadmium produces
  • gamma rays which blacken the film thus enabling
    assessment of exposure to
  • neutrons. In addition a strip of indium foil may
    be housed in a recess in the
  • badge. This foil becomes radioactive after
    exposure to neutrons and can be
  • used to identify exposed personnel in the event
    of a criticality accident.

9
Radiography Department
  • Walls
  • Primary beam
  • Lead glass screens
  • Lead gloves, aprons or sheets
  • Beam filtration
  • Exposure times
  • Beam definers and collimators
  • Intensifying screens

10
Nuclear medicine department
  • Lab design
  • Negative pressure
  • Fume cupboards
  • Waste
  • Protective clothing
  • Long handled tongs
  • Finger radiation monitors
  • Wall mounted monitors

11
Radiotherapy department
  • Medical personal leave the room
  • Safety locks
  • Lead shielding
  • Treatment plan
  • X ray beams collimated
  • Exposure
  • Dose monitors

12
Radioisotopes
  • Destruction of cancer
  • Powering pacemakers
  • Looking inside the body

13
Radioactive tracers
  • Radionuclide- unstable nuclide that spontaneously
    decays by emitting radiation, preferably
    ?-radiation
  • Becquerel (Bq)- is an activity of 1
    disintegration per second.
  • Half-life (T1/2) average time taken for half the
    radioactive atoms in the sample to decay

14
Effective half life
  • 1/TE 1/TB 1/TP
  • TE effective half life
  • TB biological half life
  • TP physical half life

15
Example
  • The human serum albumin labelled with 125I is
    sometimes administered during radioactive tracer
    investigations. 125I has a physical half life of
    60 days, but itas biological cleared from the
    body with a half life of 21 days. Estimate the
    effective half life

16
Example cont
  • 1/TE 1/TB 1/TP
  • 1/TE 1/60 1/21
  • 1/TE 9/140
  • TE 140/9
  • TE 15.5555
  • TE 16 days (2sf)

17
  • Do question 23.3 on pg 54 of your revision guide
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