| Literature DB >> 25883779 |
Luna Gargani1, Eugenio Picano1.
Abstract
The increasing use and complexity of imaging techniques have not been matched by increasing awareness and knowledge by prescribers and practitioners. Imaging examinations that expose to ionizing radiation provide immense benefits when appropriate, yet they may result in an increased incidence of radiation-induced cancer in the long-term. The radiation issue is relevant not only for the individual patient but also for the community because small individual risks multiplied by millions of examinations become a significant population risk. As recently highlighted by recent European and American Guidelines, the long-term risk associated with radiation exposure should be considered in the risk-benefit assessment behind appropriate prescription of diagnostic testing.Entities:
Keywords: Chest imaging; Lung ultrasound; Point of care; Radiation exposure
Year: 2015 PMID: 25883779 PMCID: PMC4392040 DOI: 10.1186/s13089-015-0020-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Ultrasound J ISSN: 2036-3176
Standard average estimated radiation doses of common non-invasive chest imaging in adults (modified from refs. [2] and [21])
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|---|---|---|
| Radiology | ||
| Chest radiography (single postero-anterior film) | 0.02 | 1 |
| Chest CT | 6 to 8 | 300 to 400 |
| 64-slice coronary CT | 15 (3 to 32) | 750 (150 to 1,600) |
| Calcium score | 3 (1–12) | 150 |
| Nuclear medicine | ||
| 99mTc-Sestamibi (1100 MBq, 1 day) stress-rest | 9.4 | 470 |
| 201Thallium stress/rest reinj. (185 MBq, double injection) | 40.7 | 2,035 |
| PET N-13 ammonia stress-rest (1100 MBq) | 2.4 | 120 |
| PET F-18 FDG rest (400 MBq, viability) | 8 | 400 |
| 133Xenon (400 MBq, lung ventilation) | 0.4 | 20 |
| 99mTc-MAA (185 MBq, lung perfusion) | 2 | 100 |
Radiation in paediatric imaging: current and future approaches (modified from ref. [23])
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|---|---|---|
| Patient | ||
| Culture | More (exams) is better | Less (dose) is better |
| Radiation history | Absent | Present |
| Radiological informed consent | Absent | Present and informative |
| Received dose in report | Missing | Mandatory |
| Organ dose | Ignored | Considered |
| Doctor/scientist | ||
| Optimizing dose | Matter of investigation for physicists | Preventing cancer |
| Technology upgrading | Focused on short-term costs | Focused on long-term risks |
| Radiological risk estimation | Population-based | Personalized |
| Dose reading | Offline, months later | Online, real time |