| Literature DB >> 32999372 |
Kelly S Wilson-Stewart1,2, Davide Fontanarosa3,4, Dan Li5,6,7, Chris C Drovandi5,6,7, Rebecca K Anderson8, Jamie V Trapp9.
Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the effect of nurse and doctor height on occupational dose to the temple during fluoroscopically guided cardiovascular procedures. Additionally, an evaluation of the relationship between doctor height and table height was performed. Staff exposed during fluoroscopic procedures may be at elevated risk of cardiovascular damage or oncogenesis and have demonstrated a higher incidence of subscapular cataracts. The heads of taller staff may be exposed to reduced levels of radiation due to the increased distance from the area of highest intensity X-ray scatter. Limited research has been performed investigating height as a predictor of head dose to nursing staff. The level of radiation dose at the level of the temple to the doctor (n = 25), scrub (n = 28), and scout nurse (n = 29) was measured in a prospective single-center, observational study using Philips DoseAware badges. Procedural characteristics were recorded for vascular and cardiac cases performed in three dedicated angiography suites. Data were also collected to investigate relationships between doctor height and table height. Data were collected for 1585 cardiac and 294 vascular procedures. Staff height was a statistically significant predictor of temple dose for doctors, scrub, and scout nurses when considering the full data sample. The log temple dose demonstrated an inverse relationship to staff height during cardiac procedures, but a positive relationship for scrub and scout nurses during vascular studies. This observational study has demonstrated that taller staff are exposed to less cranial exposure dose during fluoroscopically guided cardiac examinations but has revealed a positive correlation between height and temple dose during vascular procedures. It was also determined that doctor height was correlated with average procedural table height and that vascular access point influences the choice of table elevation.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32999372 PMCID: PMC7528059 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-73101-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Methodology and conclusion summary of previous investigations of staff height as a predictor of occupational dose during fluoroscopic procedures.
| Author | Clinical (C)/phantom (P) | Doctor | Other staff | Measured location | Specialty | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albayati et al.[ | C (n = 17) | ✓ (n = 3) | Assistant doctor Radiologist (n = 2) | Head Thorax | Peripheral vascular/radiology | Inverse relationship between doctor height and head dose No relationship between doctor height and thorax dose No relationship between assistant doctor height and measured doses |
| Kuon et al.[ | P | ✓ | ✗ | Thorax | Cardiology | Inverse relationship between doctor height and dose |
| Principi et al.[ | C (n = 13) P | ✓ (n = 6) | ✗ | Eye | Radiology /cardiology | Inverse relationship between doctor height and dose A reduction factor up to 2 is observed for a 10-cm-taller doctora |
| Rigatelli et al.[ | C (n = 2630) P | ✓ (n = 4) | Nurses (n = 9) Technicians (n = 7) | Thorax | Peripheral vascular/cardiology | Inverse relationship between staff height and dose for both clinical and phantom measurements independent on procedure type Result was consistent with/without the use of a CMLSa |
| Sciahbasi et al.[ | C (n = 2028) | ✓ (n = 6) | ✗ | Thorax Head Left wrist | Cardiology | Inverse relationship between height and dose measured at thorax |
| Willard et al.[ | P | ✓ | ✗ | Head | Urology | Shorter surgeons receive higher scattered radiation exposure to the brain and eyes during fluoroscopy |
CMLS ceiling-mounted lead shield; cm centimetre; n number of procedures in clinical studies, or the number of individual staff included in the study; ✓, staff role included in the study sample; ✗, staff role not included in the study sample; C, clinical study, P, phantom study
aNoteworthy.
Figure 1Position of DoseAware badge when worn attached to glasses.
Figure 2(a, b) Typical room setup and staff location. CMLS ceiling-mounted lead shield, TMLS table-mounted lead shield, D doctor, SN scrub nurse, ST scout nurse.
Procedure type and case numbers.
| Procedure category | Procedure type | Number |
|---|---|---|
| Coronary angiography—diagnostic | 866 | |
| Coronary angiography—interventional | 534 | |
| Total | 1400 | |
| TAVI workups | 21 | |
| TAVI/Balloon valvuloplasty | 24 | |
| Total | 45 | |
| PPM | 67 | |
| Watchman/amulet | 14 | |
| ASD/PFO closure | 9 | |
| Balloon pump | 1 | |
| Total | 91 | |
| Diagnostic and interventional | 48 | |
| Abdominal angiography—diagnostic | 20 | |
| Abdominal angiography—interventional | 42 | |
| Abdominal + lower limb/s—diagnostic | 28 | |
| Abdominal + lower limb/s—interventional | 48 | |
| Lower limb diagnostic | 25 | |
| Lower limb interventional | 68 | |
| Subclavian/fistulogram/carotids—diagnostic | 5 | |
| Subclavian/fistulogram/carotids—interventional | 20 | |
| EVAR/FEVAR | 38 | |
| Total | 294 |
TAVI transcatheter aortic valve implantation, PPM permanent pacemaker, ASD atrial septal defect, PFO patent foramen ovale, EP electrophysiology, EVAR endovascular aneurysm repair, FEVAR fenestrated endovascular aneurysm repair.
Routinely utilized procedural tube angles.
| Procedure | LAO ↑ (35°/25°) | LAO ↓ (40°/35°) | RAO ↓ (20°/20°) | RAO ↑ (30°/30°) | AP ↑ (10°/35°) | AP (0°/0°) | RAO (30°) | LAO (30°) | LAO ↑ (25°/10°) | RAO (20°) | LAO | LAO (40°) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary angiogram | ||||||||||||
| LCA | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | |||||||
| RCA | √ | √ | √ | |||||||||
| LV | √ | |||||||||||
| TAVI workup | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
| TAVI | √a | √ | √ | |||||||||
| PPM | √ | √ | √ | |||||||||
| EP | √ | √ | √ | |||||||||
| EVAR | √ | √ (10° ↓) | √ (10° ↓) | |||||||||
| Abdominal aorta | √ | |||||||||||
| leg | √ | |||||||||||
| subclavian | √ | |||||||||||
| fistulograms | √ | |||||||||||
LCA left coronary artery, RCA right coronary artery, LV left ventriculogram, TAVI transcatheter aortic valve implantation, PPM permanent pacemaker, EP electrophysiology, EVAR endovascular aneurysm repair, LAO left anterior oblique, RAO right anterior oblique, AP anterior–posterior, ↑ cranial angulation, ↓ caudal angulation.
aIndividually customized implantation angle.
Staff height per procedural category.
| Procedure type | Staff role | N | Mean | Std Dev | Min | 1st quartile | Median | 3rd quartile | Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doctor | 1234 | 174 | 6.2 | 168 | 169 | 172 | 178 | 192 | |
| Scrub | 1147 | 173 | 10.0 | 157 | 165 | 170 | 181 | 190 | |
| Scout | 677 | 171 | 9.3 | 157 | 165 | 167 | 178 | 190 | |
| Doctor | 194 | 179 | 6.5 | 168 | 176 | 176 | 185 | 185 | |
| Scrub | 231 | 170 | 9.6 | 155 | 165 | 166 | 178 | 190 | |
| Scout | 143 | 173 | 9.9 | 160 | 166 | 174 | 180 | 190 |
Measured in centimeters (cm) expressed as mean, standard deviation, minimum, 1st Quartile, median, 3rd Quartile and maximum.
Figure 3Impact of staff height on log temple dose with respect to body part imaged and different staff roles, doctor (a), scrub nurse (b), and scout nurse (c), for the median value of contrast volume. (d) demonstrates doctor dose with 95% quantile of contrast volume.
Figure 4Impact of staff height on log temple for coronary (a) and vascular (b) procedures and different staff roles, for the median value of contrast volume.
Log temple dose change for different levels of staff height.
| Procedure type | Contrast (ml) | Staff height (reference level: 160 cm) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 170 cm | 180 cm | 190 cm | ||
| Coronary | 15 | − 0.55 | − 1.11 | − 1.66 |
| 60 | − 0.52 | − 1.02 | − 1.53 | |
| 95 | − 0.48 | − 0.97 | − 1.45 | |
| 146 | − 0.44 | − 0.88 | − 1.32 | |
| 266 | − 0.34 | − 0.67 | − 1.01 | |
| Vascular | 15 | 0.11 | 0.23 | 0.34 |
| 60 | 0.15 | 0.31 | 0.46 | |
| 95 | 0.18 | 0.37 | 0.55 | |
| 146 | 0.23 | 0.46 | 0.69 | |
| 266 | 0.33 | 0.67 | 1.00 | |
Procedures, doctors and average table height.
| Room | procedures | No. doctors | Mean TH | Std Dev TH | Min TH | Max TH |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 62 | 4 | 92.5 cm | 19.9 | 86 | 110 |
| 2 | 88 | 16 | 91.6 | 2.2 | 86 | 99 |
| 3 | 52 | 16 | 91 | 2.09 | 85 | 95 |
Measured in centimeters (cm).
TH table height.
Figure 5Impact of doctor height (cm) on table height for the median patient BMI (a) of 28.40 and the 95% quantile BMI (b) of 38.61.
Figure 6Average table height (cm) for different vascular access points.
Figure 7The heads of taller staff (a) may be exposed to less scattered radiation than shorter staff (b). D doctor, SN scrub nurse.