| Literature DB >> 15555078 |
Abstract
Ultrasounds and ionizing radiation are extensively used for diagnostic applications in the cardiology clinical practice. This paper reviewed the available information on occupational risk of the cardiologists who perform, every day, cardiac imaging procedures. At the moment, there are no consistent evidence that exposure to medical ultrasound is capable of inducing genetic effects, and representing a serious health hazard for clinical staff. In contrast, exposure to ionizing radiation may result in adverse health effect on clinical cardiologists. Although the current risk estimates are clouded by approximations and extrapolations, most data from cytogenetic studies have reported a detrimental effect on somatic DNA of professionally exposed personnel to chronic low doses of ionizing radiation. Since interventional cardiologists and electro-physiologists have the highest radiation exposure among health professionals, a major awareness is crucial for improving occupational protection. Furthermore, the use of a biological dosimeter could be a reliable tool for the risk quantification on an individual basis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15555078 PMCID: PMC538257 DOI: 10.1186/1476-7120-2-25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Ultrasound ISSN: 1476-7120 Impact factor: 2.062
Figure 1At high acoustic pressure, ultrasound is capable of causing rapid bubble which grow and collapse among them (a) and cells (b). This mechanism results in the production of sufficient energy to disrupt chemical bonds and produce reactive free radicals, that may interfere with DNA.
Summary of studies on genetic effects of medical ultrasounds
| Miller et al., 1983 (14) | Human lymphocytes exposed in vitro | SCE | 2 MHz | Negative |
| Stella et al., 1984 (15) | Human lymphocytes exposed in vitro | SCE | 1 W/cm2; 0.860 MHz; for 40–160 sec | Positive/ Negative |
| Barnett et al., 1987 (16) | Human lymphocytes exposed in vitro | SCE | 3.1 MHz | Negative |
| Carrera P et al., 1990 (17) | Chorionic villi exposed in vitro | SCE | 2 MHz at 1, 2, 3 h | Negative |
| Miller et al., 1991 (18) | Human lymphocytes from exposed patients | SCE | 4 patients underwent therapeutic US | Negative |
| Martini et al., 1991 (19) | Lymphocyte and lymphoblastoid cells exposed in vitro | SCE | 5 MHz for 20 sec, 1 min, 5 min, and 20 min | Negative |
| Sahin O et al., 2004 (20) | Human lymphocytes from exposed patients | MN | 10 patients underwent 10 session of US therapy at 1 MHz for 10 min and 10 control subjects underwent sham-therapeutic US | Negative |
| Garaj-Vrhovac and Kopjar, 2000 (22) | Human lymphocytes from cardiologists working with Doppler ultrasound | CA | Unit working with colour Doppler US (transducer frequencies 2.5–7.5 MHz. | Positive |
SCE: sister-chromatid exchange; MN: Micronuclei; CA: Chromosomal aberrations; SPPA: Spatial Peak Pulse Average
Figure 2Radiation damage of DNA. Damaged DNA is screened through the process of DNA repair and mismatch correction. DNA lesions that escape repair, has the ability to produce mutations, which lead to the development and the progression of both cancer and human diseases even decades after exposure.
Recommended occupational dose limits by International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP).
| whole body | 20 mSv | 2 rem |
| Lens of the eye | 150 mSv | 15 rem |
| Skin, hands, feet, and other organs | 500 mSv | 50 rem |
Doctors' knowledge of radiation dose and risk for medical ionising testing
| Shiralkar S et al., 2003 (6) | British physicians | Radiation doses for common radiological investigations. | 97% of doctors underestimates dose. |
| Finestone A et al., 2003 (7) | Istraeli orthopaedists | Mortality risk of radiation-induced carcinoma from bone scan scintigraphy | Mortality risk was identified correctly by less than 5% of respondents. |
| Lee CI et al., 2004 (8) | Emergency department (ED), physicians and radiologists | Radiation dose and possible risks associated with CT scan | Almost all doctors were unable to accurately estimate the dose. |
| Correia MJ et al., 2005 (9) | Adult and paediatric cardiologists | Environmental impact, individual bio-risks, dose exposure and medico-legal regulation of medical ionising testing | Only 11%, 5%, 29% and 42% of physicians correctly identified environmental impact, individual bio-risks, dose exposure and legal regulation, respectively. |
CT = computed tomography; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; US = ultrasound
Figure 3Biomarkers of DNA damage in human lymphocytes: a) Structural chromosomal aberrations (CA) are typical of cancer cells, probably as a manifestation of genetic instability. b) Micronuclei (MN) can originate from chromosome breaks or whole chromosomes that fail to engage with the mitotic spindle when the cell divides. Therefore, the micronucleus test can be considered just as a real "biological dosimeter" for evaluating both numerical and structural chromosome aberrations. c) Sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) represent symmetrical exchanges between sister chromatids; generally they do not result in chromosomal alterations of the genetic information. c) The Comet assay is an especially sensitive method for detecting DNA single-strand breaks and oxidative DNA damage in individual cells. The entity of the DNA damage is proportional to the length of the comet.
Cytogenetic studies in hospital workers
| Bigatti et al, 1988, (54) | 63 (physicians, nurses and technicians) | 30 (ward nurses and office personnel) | CA | Positive | < legal limit. | No |
| Barquinero et al, 1993, (55) | 26 (hospital workers) | 10 (healthy individuals) | CA | Positive | 1.6–42.71 mSv | No |
| Paz-y-Mino et al, 1995, (56) | 10 (hospital workers) | 10 (healthy individuals) | CA | Positive | 1.84 mSv/year. | No |
| Vera et al, 1997, (57) | 20 (medical staff working at an X-ray department) | 20 (general population) | CA | Positive | <25 mSv/year. | No (Major DNA damage in subjects exposed to both ultrasound and X-ray) |
| Bonassi et al., 1997, (58) | 871 (hospital workers from 4 laboratories) | 617 (healthy individuals) | CA | Positive | Available only partially and variable. | Yes/No |
| Rozgaj et al, 1999, (59) | 483 (radiologists, pneumologists, technicians) | 160 (healthy individuals) | CA | Positive | <20 mSv/year | No |
| Undeger et al., 1999, (60) | 30 (technicians) | 30 (nurses, technicians, office personnel) | Comet | Positive | 50 mSv/ year. | No |
| Cardoso et al, 2001, (61) | 8 (workers in X-rays, radiotherapy and nuclear medicine sectors) | 8 (healthy individuals) | CA | Positive | 63.2 mSv/life | No |
| Maluf et al, 2001, (62) | 22 (hospital workers) | 22 (non-exposed workers) | MN | Positive | 0.2 – 121. mSv | No |
| Maffei et al, 2002, (63) | 37 (physicians, technicians) | 37 (non-exposed workers | MN | Negative/ Positive | 35 mSv /life | No |
| Bozkurt et al, 2003, (64) | 16 (nuclear medicine) | 16 (non-exposed physicians) | SCE | Positive | 3.39 mSv/year. | Yes |
| Garaj-Vrhovac and Kopjar, 2003, (65) | 50 (physicians, 25 technicians, 10 nurses) | 50 (healthy students and office employees) | Comet | Positive | 0–8.5 mSv/year. | No |
| Maffei et al, 2004, (66) | 34 (physicians, technicians) | 35 (non-exposed workers) | CA | Positive | 1.81–141.77 mSv/life. | Yes |
| Zakeri et al., 2004, (67) | 71 (cardiologists, nurses and technicians) | 36 (healthy individuals) | CA | Positive | 3.0 mSv/year | No |
| Andreassi et al, 2004, (67) | 31 interventional cardiologists | 31 clinical cardiologists | MN | Positive | 4 mSv/year | No |
SCE: sister-chromatid exchange; MN: Micronuclei; CA: Chromosomal aberrations;
Figure 4a) Decrease in exposure to ionizing radiation in hospital radiologists over the most recent decades and b) a similar time-related reduction in the frequency of chromosome-type aberrations (redrawn from ref. 58)
Figure 5Illustration of potential use of biomarkers as early predictors of clinical disease. The evaluation of genetic effects such as chromosomal damage could be used to anticipate delayed health outcomes, providing a greater potential for preventive measures.