Title: Radiation Kilo Curie
1Do not adjust your set
2Radiation Protection Refresher for Dental Staff
- 4 February 2004
- John Saunderson,
- Radiation Protection Adviser
3Wilhelm Roentgen
- Discovered X-rays on 8th November 1895
4Colles fracture 1896
Frau Roentgens hand, 1895
5First Dental Radiograph
- Otto Walkhoff (Dentist - Braunschweig, Germany)
- Jan.1896 (lt2 weeks after Roentgen announced
discovery of X-rays) - 25 minute exposure.
61 Feb 1896
- Walter Konig (physicist, Germany)
- 9 min. exposure
7Dr Rome Wagner and assistant
8First radiograph of the human brain 1896
In reality a pan of cat intestines photographed
by H.A. Falk (1896)
9First Reports of Injury
- Late 1896
- Elihu Thomson - burn from deliberate exposure of
finger
Edisons assistant - hair fell out scalp became
inflamed ulcerated
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11Edmund Kells
- April 1896 built own X-ray machine, packed films
in rubber and took X-ray of his dental assistant - 10 years on, cancer of right hand
- 42 operations in next 20 years lost hand, arm
and shoulder.
12Testing X-ray Sets the early days
13William Rollins
- Rollins W. X-light kills. Boston Med Surg J
1901144173. - Codman EA. No practical danger from the x-ray.
Boston Med Surg J 1901144197
14- Dental office - 1913
- Lead glass shield used
- (Although high voltage wires not!).
15How does radiation cause harm?
- LD(50/30) 4 Gy
- 280 J to 70 kg man
- 1 milli-Celsius rise in body temp.
- drinking 6 ml of warm tea
- i.e. not caused by heating, but ionisation
- Damages DNA.
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21Where very large doses kill many cells
- radiation burns
- cateract
- radiation sickness.
22Dose measurements
- Skin dose, cone end dose Grays
- 1 Gy 1,000 mGy 1,000,000 uGy
- sometimes Sieverts used. For dental 1 Sv 1Gy
- e.g. cone end dose typically 2 mGy
- Effective dose Sieverts
- 1 Sv 1,000 mSv 1,000,000 uSv
- Dose averaged over whole body
- e.g. UK background dose about 2.5 mGy
23Deterministic (threshold) risksVery large doses
onlyThe bigger the dose, the more severe the
effect
Staff doses never this big
24Stochastic Effects
- Caused by cell mutation leading to cancer or
hereditary disease - Current theory says, no threshold
- The bigger the dose, the more likely effect
- So how big is the risk?.
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26Cancer deaths between 1950 and 1990 among Life
Span Study survivors with significant exposure
(i.e. gt 5 mSv or within 2.5 km of the
hypercentre)
27Fraction of cancers induced by radiation
28Fraction of cancers induced by radiation
? Risk of inducing fatal cancer 1 in 20,000 per
mSv
29Data Sources for Risk Estimates
- North American patients - breast, thyroid, skin
- German patients with Ra-224 - bone
- Euro. Patients with Thorotrast - liver
- Oxford study - in utero induced cancer
- Atomic bomb survivors - leukaemia, lung, colon,
stomach, remainder .
30ICRP risk factors
5.0 x 10-5 per mSv ? 1 in 20,000 chance .
31Pregnancy - Radiation Risks
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33For diagnostic procedures
- Doses unlikely to be high enough to cause fetal
death or malformation - Increased risk of childhood cancer
- Risks must be assessed for each individual case.
34Doses in Dentistry
- Threshold for skin burn 2 Gy 2,000 mGy
- 1 mSv gives 1 in 20,000 risk of fatal cancer
- Skin dose from mandibular molar lt 0.01 Gy (10
mGy) - Effective dose from
- intraoral 0.005 mSv
- panoramic 0.010 mSv
- Dose to staff 1.5 m from patient 0.0003 mSv
35Risks in Dentistry
- No risk of deterministic effects
- Risks of inducing fatal cancer
- Intraoral 1 in 4 million per film
- Panoramic 1 in 2 million per film
- Staff at 1.5 m 1 in 67 million per film
- SO WHY WORRY ABOUT SUCH SMALL RISKS??
36700 CANCER CASES CAUSED BY X-RAYS
30 January 2004
- X-RAYS used in everyday detection of diseases and
broken bones are responsible for about 700 cases
of cancer a year, according to the most detailed
study to date. -
- The research showed that 0.6 per cent of the
124,000 patients found to have cancer each year
can attribute the disease to X-ray exposure.
Diagnostic X-rays, which are used in conventional
radiography and imaging techniques such as CT
scans, are the largest man-made source of
radiation exposure to the general population. - Although such X-rays provide great benefits, it
is generally accepted that their use is
associated with very small increases in cancer
risk. -
37Because large numbers exposed
- UK 2000
- 13 million dental X-rays
- 31 of diagnostic X-rays
- (0.4 of dose)
- 1 in 4 million risk per X-ray
- Therefore, high probability that radiation from
angiography will kill some patients (approx. 3 a
year) - So
- All exposures must be JUSTIFIED
- Doses to patients, and staff, must be As Low As
Reasonably Achievable (ALARA principle) .
38International Commission on Radiological
Protection System of Radiological Protection
- Justification
- Optimisation
- Limitation.
39Justification
- For any radiation exposure the benefits must
outweigh the risks - i.e. Never X-ray a patient unless it is necessary
- No unnecessary staff in room while X-raying.
40Basic Principles of Optimisation
41Leakage
42Distance
- Double distance 1/4 dose
- Triple distance 1/9th dose.
43Shielding
44Shielding
45Typical Transmission through Shielding (90 kV)
- 0.25 mm lead rubber apron ? 8.5
- 0.35 mm lead rubber apron ? 5
- 2 x 0.25 mm apron ? 2.5
- 2 x 0.35 mm apron ? 1.0
- Double brick wall ? 0.003
- Plasterboard stud wall ? 32
- Solid wooden 1 door ? 81
- Code 3 lead (1.3 mm) ? 0.1.
46Lead Apron Storage
- Always return to hanger
- Do not
- fold
- dump on floor and run trolleys over the top of
them!!! - X-ray will check annually
- But if visibly damaged, ask X-ray to check them.
47Organising radiation safety
- Controlled Areas
- Local Rules
- Radiation Protection Supervisor
- Radiation Protection Adviser.
48Optimising Patient Doses
- Fast films
- Good processing
- Long cones
- High kVs
- QA and maintenance
- Training
49Limitation
- Legal dose limits
- Dose constraints
- Investigation levels
- Dose Reference Levels
50IRR99 Dose limits for Dental Work
- Staff operating X-ray units - 6 mSv a year
effective dose - 150 mSv to skin, etc., 45 mSv to lens of eye
- Member of the public - 1 mSv a year effective
dose - Fetus of an employee - 1 mSv during declared term
- Patient receiving medical exposure - no limit
- Comforter carer - no limit.
51Staff doses vs dose limits
- Dose to staff 1.5 m from patient 0.0003 mSv
- So, if
- 50 films taken a week
- for 48 weeks a year
- Staff dose 50 x 48 x 0.0003 0.72 mSv.
52Dose Constraints
- Used in designing radiation protection
precautions - Dental operators 1 mSv
- Public, other staff 0.3 mSv
- Used for comforters and carers
- 5 mSv
- If pregnant, 1 mSv
- Used for medical research.
53Dose Investigation Level
- Set locally
- 1 mSv recommended
- If exceeded have internal investigation.
54Diagnostic Reference Levels
- Average dose for a sample of patients should be
below DRL - If not, investigate
- Dental DRLs
- Mandibular molar 2 mGy cone end dose
- Panoramic 65 mGy.mm
- Checked annually on radiation protection survey.
55Doses Much Greater Than Intended
- For dental, x 20
- If machine fault report to HSE
- If other reason report DoH.
56Typical Intra-Oral Staff Doses
- Cone end dose 2 mGy per film
- Operator dose limit lt 3 films per year
- Primary at 1 m 0.08 mGy per film
- Public dose constraint lt 4 film per year
- Operator dose constraint lt 13 film per year
- Primary at 1 m through patient 0.002 mGy per
film - Public dose constraint lt 3 film per week
- Operator dose constraint lt 10 film per week
- Scatter at 1 m from patient 0.0005 mGy per film
- Public dose constraint lt 12 film per week
- Operator dose constraint lt 40 film per week.
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