Title: Introduction to Clinical Radiography
1Introduction to Clinical Radiography
- RADI R103
- Unit II --Radiation Protection
2Introduction to Clinical Radiography
- Unit IIRadiation ProtectionR103 Lecture 6
3Background Information
- Basic assumptions about ionizing radiation (X
rays other forms) - -- potentially harmful to biologic tissue
- -- ionization of tissue atoms can change the
normal structure function - -- any level of exposure may cause damage
- -- body able to repair damage
- from low levels of exposure
- most of time
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5Background Information (cont.)
- Energy of x ray that enters object
- -- transmitted all x-ray energy exits
unchanged - -- absorbed all x ray energy deposited in
tissue - -- scattered part of the energy deposited
possible for more interactions to occur
(partial absorption) - Deposited energy is what causes damage
6SOURCES OF IONIZING RADIATION
- natural sources 82
- cosmic (from space)
- terrestrial (from earth)
- internal (in the body)
- radon (radioactive gas)
- manmade sources 18
- diagnostic x-ray procedures
- nuclear medicine procedures
- consumer products
- other
7Concepts of Radiation Protection
- limiting ionizing radiation exposure
- Uses ALARA concept
- As Low As Reasonably Achievable
- views use of radiation in terms of RISK vs.
BENEFIT - Provides Standards and Guidelines (SG) for
appropriate use of radiation
8ALARA
- GOAL decrease exposure whenever possible
- does not eliminate radiation exposure
- provides guidelines to limit the risk of bodily
injury
9RISK vs. BENEFIT
- all exposure has "potential" for harm
- Benefit must outweigh Risk
- BENEFIT improvement in the persons life
- RISK a possible harmful effect
- (perceived or actual)
- requires use of good judgment
10Common Risks
Accident Fatality risk/year
Motor vehicle 14,000
Fall 110,000
Fire 125,000
Lightening 11,000,000
Radiation 1300,000,000
11Standards Guidelines (SG)
- set by the scientific community
- federal state legislation based on SG
- Organizations
- ICRP (International Commission on Radiological
Protection) - NCRP (National Council on Radiation Protection
Measurements) - NRC (Nuclear Regulatory Commission)
- Code of Federal Regulations (Title 10, part 20)
12MEASURING RADIATION
Quantity Unit
Definition A physical property or characteristic that can be measured A standard used in measuring a quantity
Examples Distance meters, feet, etc.
Time seconds, hours, etc.
Speed mph
Radiation exposure roentgen, C/kg
13EXPOSURE
- applies to x rays gamma rays only
- measures ionization of air
- electric charge ( of e- released by ionization)
- standard volume of air
- UNIT
- traditional ROENTGEN R
- SI coulomb/kilogram C/kg
14ABSORBED DOSE
- measures amount of energy deposited in matter
- depends on energy of the radiation
- applies to any ionizing radiation
- measured in any matter
- UNIT
- traditional Radiation Absorbed Dose (rad)
- SI Gray (Gy)
15DOSE EQUIVALENT
- measures relative biological effect
- only quantity used in radiation protection
- occupational exposure
- applies to any ionizing radiation
- absorbed dose times a quality factor
(weighting) for the type of radiation - UNIT
- traditional Radiation Equivalent Man (rem)
- SI sievert (Sv)
16QUALITY FACTOR (QF)
- rem rad x QF
- QF (WR) varies for differing radiations
Radiation QF
X-rays gamma rays 1
Beta electrons 1
Thermal neutrons 5
Protons 20
Alpha particles 20
17ACTIVITY
- applies to materials that emit radiation
- -- emit particles or EM energy from nucleus
- -- atoms are changing composition "decaying"
- activity of atoms decaying/unit time
- UNIT
- traditional CURIE (Ci)
- SI BECQUEREL (Bq)
18Summary
19Introduction to Clinical Radiography
- Unit IIRadiation ProtectionR103 Lecture 7
20Overview - Harmful Effects
- 1. Sensitivity of living tissues
Sensitivity Cell type Examples
High Immature dividing embryonic, fetal, lymph
Intermediate cornea, liver
Low Mature not dividing muscle, brain, nerves
21- 2. Somatic vs. Genetic Effects
Definition Examples
Somatic Harm to person exposed to the radiation Skin reddening (erythema), hair loss, nausea, etc.
Genetic Harm to person in future generation due to ancestors exposure ???(no unique effect), animal studies suggest links to increased mutations
22- 3. Stochastic vs. Deterministic Effects
Traits Example
Stochastic all or none response statistical ? any dose can cause ? Incidence of a type of cancer in population
Deterministic (non stochastic) certainty effects severity of effect ? with ? dose minimum dose required Erythema all will experience once minimum dose is given gets worse with ? dose
23EFFECTS ATTRIBUTED TO EXPOSURE
- 1. carcinogenesis
- no unique cancer
- most common cancer types
- leukemia
- thyroid cancer
24- 2. somatic tissue damage
- cataract formation (long term exposures)
- erythemia (high exposure, short time period)
- life span shortening (long term exposures)
25- 3. genetic effects
- no unique genetic defect
- evidence suggests an é in mutations with an é in
radiation exposure
26- 4. fetal (embryo) effects -- somatic
- effect depends on radiation dose stage of
development of the fetus - types of effects death, malformation, growth
retardation, cancer - most significant area of concern for Dx
radiography
27DOSE LIMITATIONS
- dose equivalent limits (maximum permissible dose)
as established by NCRP - doses with an acceptably small risk to the
individual society - does not include exposure from natural sources
(background) of radiation - radiation user responsible for limiting exposure
- provides upper limits of acceptable exposure
- actual exposure should be kept well below limit
28NCRP Limits
Class of Individual Rems mSv
Occupational (annual)
stochastic effects 5 50
non stochastic
lens of eye 15 150
all other areas of body 50 500
lifetime cumulative (years) 1 x age 10 x age
Public (annual)
effective dose limit
frequent exposure 0.1 1
infrequent exposure 0.5 5
equivalent dose limits
lens of the eye 1.5 15
skin, extremities 5 50
Trainees under 18 years of age
effective dose limit 0.1 1
equivalent dose limits
lens of the eye 1.5 15
skin, extremities 5 50
Embryo-fetal exposures
total dose equivalent 0.5 5
dose equivalent limit in 1 month 0.05 0.5
29Practical Radiation Protection
- Radiographers are responsible for radiation
protection for - ? themselves
- ? the patient
- ? fellow workers
- ? any others in the area
30Protection -- Occupational Workers
- Three Principles that limit exposure
- TIME
- DISTANCE
- SHIELDING
- These principles also apply to all those in area
who may be exposed to the radiation during an
examination.
31- 1. T I M E
- -- keep time spent in active area low
- -- do not be in room during exposure unless
needed - -- refers to radiographers working time
not time set on the control console
32- 2. D I S T A N C E
- -- increase the distance between you radiation
source (scatter) - -- radiation divergence means radiation will
cover a larger area as distance increases - -- learn use Inverse Square Law
33Inverse Square Law
- inverse square of the distance change factor of
change in radiation exposure - find distance change
- invert square to find exposure change
34Inverse Square Law
- example move from 4 to 6 ft from source
6 4
- result exposure at 6 is .44 X the exposure at
4 (or 44 of the original exposure)
35- 3. S H I E L D I N G
- use absorber between yourself radiation
- wear a lead apron if you will be in the exposure
room - wear lead gloves if your hands will be near the
direct beam and patient - use the control console wall/window as a barrier
36EXPOSURE RECORDS
- Keep accurate occupational exposure records
- always wear your exposure badge
- report unusual exposures or misuse of badge
- change your badge at the appropriate time
- check the exposure report monthly
- learn how to interpret the report
37Patient Protection
- significant responsibility of any x-ray machine
operator - acceptable radiographs can be produced with an
unacceptable amount of exposure to the patient - Pregnancy precautions
38Beam Restriction
- use the collimation rule
- every image should be collimated
- reduces amount of patient receiving dose
- evidence of collimation
39Pregnancy Precautions
- always ask female patients if there is a
possibility for pregnancy - check with physician before proceeding with an
examination on a pregnant patient - shield pelvic area of female patients on every
exam unless it interferes with needed anatomy
40Shield Patient
- use lead contact shields whenever possible
(especially for gonads, thyroid, lens of eye) - caution do not cover area needed on the image
with a shield
41Fast Imaging System
- é system speed will ê amount of radiation needed
to produce an image - caution too fast of a system will not provide
detail needed for image
42high kVp with a low mAs
- é kVp more penetrating beam of x rays
- require ê x rays to produce image (êmAs)
- fewer x rays lower dose
- é kVp only will not reduce patient exposure
- caution too high a kVp will not produce an
appropriate film contrast
43Avoid Errors
- errors require repeat exposures (i.e. more
patient exposure) - careful attention to detail (positioning of
patient, selection of technical factors, etc.)
44Beam Filtration
- Filter absorber inside tube/collimator assembly
to absorb low energy radiation - not usually a practical method