| Literature DB >> 27999617 |
Daniel J Kaplan1, Jay N Patel1, Frank A Liporace1, Richard S Yoon2.
Abstract
The use of fluoroscopy has become commonplace in many orthopaedic surgery procedures. The benefits of fluoroscopy are not without risk of radiation to patient, surgeon, and operating room staff. There is a paucity of knowledge by the average orthopaedic resident in terms proper usage and safety. Personal protective equipment, proper positioning, effective communication with the radiology technician are just of few of the ways outlined in this article to decrease the amount of radiation exposure in the operating room. This knowledge ensures that the amount of radiation exposure is as low as reasonably achievable. Currently, in the United States, guidelines for teaching radiation safety in orthopaedic surgery residency training is non-existent. In Europe, studies have also exhibited a lack of standardized teaching on the basics of radiation safety in the operating room. This review article will outline the basics of fluoroscopy and educate the reader on how to safe fluoroscopic image utilization.Entities:
Keywords: Fluoroscopy; Operating room safety; Orthopaedic surgery; Radiation; Radiation exposure; Radiation safety; Surgical training; c arm
Year: 2016 PMID: 27999617 PMCID: PMC5154084 DOI: 10.1186/s13037-016-0115-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Saf Surg ISSN: 1754-9493
Fig. 1Basic c-arm unit. a. X-ray Tube; b. Image Intensifier; c. Collimator; d. Display Monitor
Basic parts of the c-arm unit
| C-arm Part | Function |
|---|---|
| X-ray Tube | Source of x-ray beam |
| Image Intensifier | Captures the x-ray beams and converts them into an image that is displayed on the display monitor |
| Collimator | Contains various apertures that determine the size and shape of the x-ray beam |
| Display Monitor | Displays the x-ray |
Fig. 2Inverse-square law: I = 1/d2, where I = magnitude of scatter and d = distance from the source. By doubling the distance from the x-ray tube, you receive only one fourth of the exposure from scatter
Fig. 3a shows a setup with the x-ray tube on the bottom. The red arrows represent radiation beams that scatter after they deflect off of the object being imaged. With the x-ray tube on the bottom most of the scattered (deflected) radiation is towards the legs and feet of the surgeon. b shows a setup with the x-ray tube on the top. Here the scattered radiation is towards the head and neck region of the surgeon
Fig. 4a shows a standard x-ray taken without collimation. b is an x-ray taken with collimation; collimation helps reduce exposure and may also help produce sharper images