29
ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

ABCs of Radiation Safety

Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI

Professor of Medicine

East Carolina University

Page 2: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Conflicts of InterestNone for purposes of this presentation

AcknowledgementsThomas Bashore, MD FSCAIStephen Balter, PhD FSCAIFor allowing me to use some of their illustrations

Page 3: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 4: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 5: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 6: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 7: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Message

• Keep the x-ray source (the tube) as far away from you (the operator) as possible consistent with optimal imaging.

Page 8: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 9: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 10: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 11: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Radiation Safety Principle

• Use the least amount of magnification consistent with seeing the object adequately.

• BIGGER IS NOT ALWAYS BETTER!!

• A larger image means more radiation– If it is necessary for adequate visualization, fine– If it does not improve procedure safety or

performance, reduce the magnification

Page 12: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 13: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 14: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Stochastic effects

• Probability proportional to dose

• Severity independent of dose

• Assumed zero threshold

Risks are Radiogenic Cancer and Genetic Damage

Page 15: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Deterministic effects

• Certainty of effect

• Severity is a function of dose

• Substantial threshold

High dose risks are:hair loss, skin damage, cataracts, and congenital abnormalities

Page 16: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 17: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 18: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 19: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 20: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 21: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 22: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Time• Radiation is only produced

when the beam is on!

• Irradiate only when it is necessary to observe motion.

• Last-image-hold and instant replay can usually save dose.

Page 23: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Distance effect

Distancefrom Beam 1 step 2 steps 3 steps 4 steps

RelativeExposure Rate 100 25 11 6

Use the inverse square law to your advantage andwhenever possible move away from the x-ray sourceas far as safety allows.

Page 24: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

ShieldingProtective shielding can markedly reduce

staff risk. (when used!)

• Structural Shielding

• Mobile Shielding

• Personal Shielding

Page 25: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Protective Clothing

• Well tailored apron

• Thyroid collar

• Eye protection

Page 26: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Collimation

Page 27: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University
Page 28: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Wear Your Exposure Badge

• It is for your benefit

• The readings should correlate with your workload

• Over-lead monitor on midline at neck level

• Under-lead monitor on midline at waist level

• Weighted average for estimating stochastic risk

Page 29: ABCs of Radiation Safety Joseph D. Babb, MD FACC FSCAI Professor of Medicine East Carolina University

Summary• Safe use of radiography demands understanding

of basic radiation physics– Sources of radiation– Proper positioning of patient in x-ray beam– Maintenance of I.I. close as possible to patient– Proper use of shielding

• Use the inverse square law of radiation exposure to your advantage

• Use the least magnification consistent with adequate visualization

• Only activate the x-ray when moving a device or assessing and injection!

• Always wear your film badge and change monthly