Title: Radiation Protection for Assistant Practitioners in Mammography
1Radiation Protection for Assistant Practitioners
in Mammography
- John Saunderson
- Radiation Protection Adviser
- (TPRH ext. 6690)
2IRMER Syllabus
- Production of X-rays
- Absorption and scatter
- Radiation hazards and dosimetry
- Special attention areas
- Radiation Protection
- Laws Guidelines
- Equipment .
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41. Fundamental Physics of Radiation
5Production of X-rays(4.1c)
6What are X-rays?
- Electromagnetic radiation .
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8What are X-rays?
- Electromagnetic radiation
- Have
- wavelength
- frequency
- energy
- Photons .
9Making X-rays
- Electromagnetic waves are made when charged
particles are decelerated - For most things ELECTRONS are used .
10Electrons
- tiny negatively charge particles
- 1 gram of electrons would be 1,000,000,000,000,00
0,000,000,000,000 (1000 trillion trillions) - moving electrons in a wire electrical current .
11Electrons moving up and down an aerial make radio
waves
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1399 electron energy wasted as heat .
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15Effect of Tube Currant (mA) and Tube Voltage (kV)
- mA effects number of electrons per second,
therefore number of x-ray photons per second - mAs effects total number of x-ray photons
- kV effects how much energy the photons have, and
how many per second - In prep., filament is heated and anode spins .
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17Tube voltage 30 kV
Molybdenum target Tungsten target
18Effect of filtration
191.1 Properties of Radiation
- Attenuation of ionising radiation
- Scattering and absorption.
20Attenuation, Scattering and Absorption
21Attenuation, Scattering, Absorption
22No attenuation - adds to contrast .
23Absorption - adds to contrast .
24Scattering - adds to contrast, if it misses
imager .
25Scattering - adds to fog, if it hits imager .
26Attenuation is absorption scatter
- Absorption adds to contrast
- Scatter can add to contrast, but can also add to
fog - For average mammogram
- 0.2 of x-ray energy reaches film
- 99.8 absorbed in breast.
27How attenuation varies
- Different energies
- Different materials
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2920
30
70
30Different Materials
- 5 cm of
- standard tissue 0.25 transmitted
- muscle 0.27 transmitted
- water 0.37 transmitted
- Perspex 0.87 transmitted
- density, atomic number
31Density
- grams per c.c.
- Calcium carbonate 2.7 g/cm3
- soft tissue 1 g/cm3
- proportional to density, so calciumwater is
about 31
32Atomic number
- Property of atoms of different elements
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34Atomic number (Z)
- Property of atoms of different elements
- Absorption proportional to Z3
- Calcium Z 20
- Hydrogen Z 1 oxygen Z 8
- so water (H2O) Z (118)/3 31/3
- so calciumwater 203 31/33 2161
- BUT scattering not affected by Z
35Effect of increasing kV
- Higher average photon energy
- Less attenuation
- Greater proportion of scatter
- Less dependant on atomic number .
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