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Medical Exposure

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The medical practitioner should keep the radiation exposure As Low As Reasonably ... Use digital radiography to capture and store images in digital form ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Medical Exposure


1
Medical Exposure
  • Dr. Nabil Maalej

2
Exposure To Radiation
3
Radiation Dose
  • Specification of the radiation absorbed dose in
    Gy or rad is inadequate for complete and accurate
    assessment of radiation hazard

4
Dose Modifying Factors
  • The type of radiation involved (wR)
  • The part of the body exposed (wT) the active
    blood forming organs, the gonads, and the lens of
    the eye are specifically sensitive
  • The time span over which the radiation dose is
    delivered
  • The age of the exposed individual the developing
    fetus is especially sensitive

5
Dose Equivalent
  • The dose equivalent is the absorbed dose in
    tissue multiplied by a quality factor wR
  • HT,R wR DT,R
  • The SI units for dose equivalent is the Sievert
    1 J/kg for wR 1
  • 1 Sievert 100 rem

6
Radiation Weighting Factors
7
Effective Dose
  • Effective Dose is the summation of tissue
    equivalent doses each multiplied by the tissue
    weighing factor

8
Tissue Weighting Factors
9
X-Rays
  • Diagnostics radiology is necessary to visualize
    human anatomy and detect disease
  • Good image quality and low patient doses are
    frequently conflicting requirements
  • The medical practitioner should keep the
    radiation exposure As Low As Reasonably
    Achievable (ALARA) to realize the benefit of
    imaging while minimizing dose to the patient.

10
Exposure
  • Exposure refers to the amount of ionization of
    air caused by x-ray and ?-ray beams
  • Exposure E Q/m
  • The unit is the Roentgen (R) the ionization
    liberating an amount of charge equal to 2.58 X
    10-4 coulombs/kg of air
  • The SI units is C/kg 3876 R
  • Exposure can be measured using ionization chambers

11
Exposure Variation With X-ray Machine Settings
  • Exposure ? (kVp)2 (1/d)2 (mAs)
  • kVp is the applied voltage, d is the distance
    from the focal spot, and mAs is the applied
    current multiplied by the time
  • Typically, for d 1 m and kVp 100 and a 2mm
    Aluminum filtration of the beam, the Exposure is
    10 mR/mAs

12
Example 1
  • Estimate the exposure at a distance d 2 m for
    5 mAs and 150 kVp, assume 2 mm Al filtration?

13
Solution
14
Typical Entrance Skin Exposure
15
The f factor (rads/roentgen)
16
X ray Dose to a Patient
  • If the exposure is measured at a location , the
    absorbed dose in rads that would be delivered to
    a person at that location can be estimated by
    means of the f factor
  • For practical purposes the exposure level in
    roentgens is approximately equal to to the
    absorbed dose in rads which is equal to the dose
    equivalent in rems

17
X ray Dose to a Patient
  • Surface Doses can also be conveniently measured
    using TLDs
  • Doses to inaccessible organs can be measured
    using body equivalent phantoms
  • Mathematical phantoms such as MIRD-5 and
    mathematical calculations such as Monte Carlo can
    be used to estimate doses

18
Reduction of Exposure
  • The medical practitioner should keep the
    radiation exposure As Low As Reasonably
    Achievable (ALARA) to realize the benefit of
    imaging while minimizing dose to the patient.
  • Use of contrast media such as barium sulfate and
    organic iodine
  • Use digital radiography to capture and store
    images in digital form
  • Digital Subtraction Angiography

19
Nuclear Medicine
  • There is a rapid expansion in the diagnostic use
    of radio-pharmaceuticals
  • Some common procedures are bone, thyroid, hart,
    lung, liver and kidney scans
  • 99mTc is the radionuclide of choice in 75 of
    nuclear medicine procedures

20
Maximum Permissible Dose
  • The maximum permissible dose (MPD) to the whole
    body for radiation workers should not exceed 50
    mSv per year as recommended by ICRP
    (International Commission of Radiological
    Protection) and NCRP
  • The Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC recommends
    that and individual lifetime exposure should not
    exceed (N-18) X 50 mSv, where N is the age in
    years

21
Maximum Permissible Doses (NCRP)
22
Typical Doses
23
Radiation Safety
  • Beside observing the MPD the rule is to keep
    radiation as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA)
  • ALARA can be applied to the handling of radiation
    sources, to storage and shielding techniques, and
    to the design and layout of the laboratory

24
Exposure Rate Constant
  • The exposure rate constants ? (R.cm2/mCi.hr) for
    a radionuclide is the exposure due to ?-rays and
    x-rays in R.hr, at a distance of 1 cm from an
    unshielded 1 mCi source of that radionuclide
  • Radiation exposure levels caused by ?-ray and
    x-ray emitters can be estimated from exposure
    rate constants ?

25
External Dose Calculation
  • The exposure rate E(R/hr) at a distance d(cm)
    from a source of activity A(mCi) and an exposure
    rate constants ?(R.cm2/mCi.hr)
  • E A ?/d2
  • Because ?-rays and x-rays are emitted
    isotropically exposure levels decrease as the
    square of distance from the source

26
Exposure Rate Constants
27
Example
  • Calculate the exposure rate at 10 cm and 300 cm
    distances from a syringe containing 30 mCi of
    99mTc? The exposure rate constant for 99mTc is
    0.6 (R.cm2/mCi.hr).

28
Answer
  • At d10 cm,
  • E A ?/d2 30(mCi) X 0.6 (R.cm2/mCi.hr)/(10 cm2)
  • 0.18 R/hr 180 mR/hr
  • And at d10 cm,
  • E 30(mCi) X 0.6 (R.cm2/mCi.hr)/(300 cm2)
  • 0.0002 R/hr 0.2 mR/hr
  • This illustrates the strong effect of distance on
    radiation exposure

29
Reduction of Exposure from External Sources
  • The basic principle of reducing doses from
    external exposure are described by the Time,
    Distance, Shielding (TDS) rules
  • Decrease the time of exposure
  • Increase the distance from the source
  • Use shielding where necessary

30
Effective Shielding
  • Use lead boxes for storage, lead lined syringes,
    lead aprons, lead bricks for lining storage
    area, leaded glass for viewing

31
Prevention of Internal Exposure
  • No eating, drinking or smoking in hot labs
  • Wear lab coats and gloves
  • No food storage in hot areas
  • Absolutely no pipetting
  • Wash hands
  • Perform work on absorbent pads and in ventilated
    hoods
  • Promptly and appropriately dispose of radioactive
    waste
  • Appropriately store radioactive materials
  • Use personnel dosimeters and laboratory monitors

32
Conclusion
  • The exposure from natural radiation is on the
    average higher than the exposure from medical
    radiological procedures
  • In order to minimize damage from radiation it is
    necessary to observe the maximum allowable limits
    and to keep exposure As Low As Reasonably
    Achievable
  • One can usually measure exposure and estimate the
    dose from a radiation source
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