Changing Default Fluoroscopy Equipment Settings Decreases Entrance Skin Dose in Patients

被引:18
作者
Canales, Benjamin K. [1 ]
Sinclair, Lindsay [3 ]
Kang, Diana [1 ,5 ]
Mench, Anna M. [4 ]
Arreola, Manuel [2 ]
Bird, Vincent G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Dept Urol, Gainesville, FL USA
[2] Univ Florida, Dept Radiol, Clin Radiol Phys, Gainesville, FL 32610 USA
[3] Oregon Hlth & Sci Univ, Dept Radiol, Salem, OR USA
[4] Salem Hosp, Dept Imaging, Salem, OR USA
[5] Scripps Green Hosp, Dept Urol, La Jolla, CA USA
关键词
kidney; nephrolithiasis; radiation dosage; skin; fluoroscopy; RADIATION-EXPOSURE; PERCUTANEOUS NEPHROLITHOTOMY; PULSED FLUOROSCOPY; URETEROSCOPY; TIME; NEPHROSTOLITHOTOMY; PERSONNEL; FEASIBILITY; MANAGEMENT; SYSTEM;
D O I
10.1016/j.juro.2015.10.088
中图分类号
R5 [内科学]; R69 [泌尿科学(泌尿生殖系疾病)];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Purpose: Proper fluoroscopic education and protocols may reduce the patient radiation dose but few prospective studies in urology have been performed. Using optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters we tested whether fluoroscopy time and/or entrance skin dose would decrease after educational and radiation reduction protocols. Materials and Methods: At default manufacturer settings fluoroscopy time and entrance skin dose were prospectively measured using optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters in patients undergoing ureteroscopy, retrograde pyelogram/ stent or percutaneous nephrolithotomy with access for stone disease. A validated radiation safety competency test was administered to urology faculty and residents before and after web based, hands-on fluoroscopy training. Default fluoroscopy settings were changed from continuous to intermittent pulse rate and from standard to half-dose output. Fluoroscopy time and entrance skin dose were then measured again. Results: The cohorts of 44 pre-protocol and 50 post-protocol patients with stones were similarly matched. The change in mean fluoroscopy time and entrance skin dose from pre-protocol to post-protocol was -0.6 minutes and -11.6 mGy (33%) for percutaneous nephrolithotomy (p = 0.62 and < 0.001), 0.5 minutes and -0.1 mGy (34%) for ureteroscopy (p = 0.42 and 0.31), and 0.1 minute and -0.1 mGy (29%) for retrograde pyelogram/stent (p = 0.85 and 0.49, respectively). Urologist post-training test scores increased 30% from pretraining scores (p = 0.1). Conclusions: Radiation safety training protocols improved clinical knowledge but did not significantly alter fluoroscopy time. Changing equipment default settings to intermittent pulse rate (12 frames per second) and half-dose lowered the entrance skin dose by 30% across all endourology patients but most significantly during percutaneous nephrolithotomy. To limit patient radiation exposure fluoroscopy default settings should be decreased before all endourology procedures and image equipment manufacturers should consider lowering standard default renal settings.
引用
收藏
页码:992 / 997
页数:6
相关论文
共 30 条
[21]   Ureteroscopy Without Fluoroscopy: A Feasibility Study and Comparison with Conventional Ureteroscopy [J].
Olgin, Gaudencio ;
Smith, Damien ;
Alsyouf, Muhannad ;
Arenas, Javier L. ;
Engebretsen, Steven ;
Huang, Gene ;
Arnold, Don C. ;
Baldwin, D. Duane .
JOURNAL OF ENDOUROLOGY, 2015, 29 (06) :625-629
[22]   RADIATION-DOSE TO PATIENT AND STAFF DURING PERCUTANEOUS NEPHROSTOLITHOTOMY [J].
RAO, PN ;
FAULKNER, K ;
SWEENEY, JK ;
ASBURY, DL ;
SAMBROOK, P ;
BLACKLOCK, NJ .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 1987, 59 (06) :508-512
[23]   Extracorporeal Shockwave Lithotripsy Versus Ureteroscopy: A Comparison of Intraoperative Radiation Exposure During the Management of Nephrolithiasis [J].
Rebuck, David A. ;
Coleman, Sarah ;
Chen, Jian-Feng ;
Casey, Jessica T. ;
Perry, Kent T. ;
Nadler, Robert B. .
JOURNAL OF ENDOUROLOGY, 2012, 26 (06) :597-601
[24]   Influence of surgeon's experience on fluoroscopy time during endourological interventions [J].
Ritter, M. ;
Siegel, F. ;
Krombach, P. ;
Martinschek, A. ;
Weiss, C. ;
Haecker, A. ;
Pelzer, A. E. .
WORLD JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2013, 31 (01) :183-187
[25]   Radiation Exposure During Continuous and Pulsed Fluoroscopy [J].
Smith, Damien L. ;
Heldt, Jonathan P. ;
Richards, Gideon D. ;
Agarwal, Gautum ;
Brisbane, Wayne G. ;
Chen, Catherine J. ;
Chamberlin, Joshua D. ;
Baldwin, D. Duane .
JOURNAL OF ENDOUROLOGY, 2013, 27 (03) :384-388
[26]   Factors Affecting the Fluoroscopic Screening Time During Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy [J].
Tepeler, Abdulkadir ;
Binbay, Murat ;
Yuruk, Emrah ;
Sari, Erhan ;
Kaba, Mehmet ;
Muslumanoglu, Ahmet Yaser ;
Tefekli, Ahmet .
JOURNAL OF ENDOUROLOGY, 2009, 23 (11) :1825-1829
[27]   Hawthorne effect: shortening of fluoroscopy times during radiation measurement studies [J].
Vehmas, T .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY, 1997, 70 (838) :1053-1055
[28]   Factors Determining Fluoroscopy Time During Ureteroscopy [J].
Violette, Philippe D. ;
Szymanski, Konrad M. ;
Anidjar, Maurice ;
Andonian, Sero .
JOURNAL OF ENDOUROLOGY, 2011, 25 (12) :1837-1840
[29]   Safety, Minimization, and Awareness Radiation Training Reduces Fluoroscopy Time During Unilateral Ureteroscopy [J].
Weld, Lancaster R. ;
Nwoye, Uzoamaka O. ;
Knight, Richard B. ;
Baumgartner, Timothy S. ;
Ebertowski, James S. ;
Stringer, Matthew T. ;
Kasprenski, Matthew C. ;
Weld, Kyle J. .
UROLOGY, 2014, 84 (03) :520-525
[30]   'X-ray'-free balloon dilation for totally ultrasound-guided percutaneous nephrolithotomy [J].
Zhou, Tie ;
Chen, Guanghua ;
Gao, Xiaofeng ;
Zhang, Wei ;
Xu, Chuanliang ;
Li, Lei ;
Sun, Yinghao .
UROLITHIASIS, 2015, 43 (02) :189-195