Evaluation of patient and staff exposure with state of the art X-ray technology in cardiac catheterization: A randomized controlled trial

被引:10
作者
Buytaert, Dimitri [1 ]
Eloot, Liesbeth [1 ]
Mauti, Maria [2 ]
Drieghe, Benny [3 ]
Gheeraert, Peter [3 ]
Taeymans, Yves [3 ]
Bacher, Klaus [1 ]
机构
[1] Ghent Univ, Dept Basic Med Sci, Proeftuinstr 86, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium
[2] Philips Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
[3] Ghent Univ Hosp, Heart Ctr, Ghent, Belgium
关键词
coronary angiography; occupational radiation dose; patient radiation dose; radiation protection; OPERATOR RADIATION-EXPOSURE; DOSE MONITORING SOFTWARE; CORONARY-ANGIOGRAPHY; INTERVENTION; DOSIMETRY; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1111/joic.12553
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Introduction Cardiac catheterization procedures result in high patient radiation exposure and corresponding staff doses are reported to be among the highest for medical staff. The purpose of current randomized controlled study was to quantify the potential radiation dose reduction for both patient and staff, enabled by recent X-ray technology. This technology is equipped with advanced image processing algorithms, real-time dose monitoring, and an acquisition chain optimized for cardiac catheterization applications. Methods A total of 122 adult patients were randomly assigned to one of two cath labs, either the reference X-ray modality (Allura Xper FD10, Philips Healthcare, the Netherlands) or the new X-ray system (AlluraClarity FD20/10 Philips Healthcare, the Netherlands). Exposure parameters and staff dosimeter readings were recorded for each exposure. Technical measurements were performed to define the radiation scatter behavior. Results With the newer equipment, patient radiation dose is reduced (as total dose-area product) by 67% based on geometric means with 95%CI of 53%, 77% for diagnostic and interventional procedures. The C-arm and leg dosimeter readings were both reduced with 65% (P < 0.001), while for the collar and chest dosimeter readings no statistically significant reduction was noticed. Conclusion The new x-ray and image processing technology, significantly reduces patient dose in coronary angiographies, and PCIs by 67%. In general, scatter dose was also reduced, yet for some dosimeters the reduction was limited and not statistically significant. This study clearly indicates that the scatter behavior is highly dependent on C-arm rotation, operator movement and height, dosimeter position, beam filtration, clinical procedure type and system geometry.
引用
收藏
页码:807 / 814
页数:8
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