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Title: Radiation Protection in Paediatric Radiology


1
Radiation Protection in Paediatric Radiology
  • Radiation Protection of Children in Screen Film
    Radiography

L03
2
Educational objectives
  • At the end of the programme, the participants
  • should
  • Become familiar with specific radiation
    protection issues in paediatric radiography
  • Identify the features of radiographic imaging
    equipment used in paediatric radiology
  • List important operational considerations in
    paediatric radiography
  • Discuss important considerations in paediatric
    radiography using mobile X-ray units

3
Answer True or False
  • Added filtration will reduce the dose to the
    patient.
  • Short exposure time is a disadvantage.
  • Proper collimation reduce dose.
  • Shielding of radiosensitive organs is recommended
    in paediatric radiography.

4
Contents
  • Justification in radiography
  • Practical optimisation in paediatric radiography
  • Equipment related
  • Radiographic technique related
  • Important consideration for mobile radiography
  • Image quality and patient dose

5
Introduction
  • Children have higher radiation sensitivity than
    adults due to a longer life expectancy
  • For children under age of 10, the probability for
    fatal cancer is 2-3 times higher than for whole
    population
  • The higher radio-sensitivity of the patients
    should be taken into account

Radiation Protection in Paediatric Radiology
L03.Radiation protection in screen-film
radiography
5
6
Introduction
  • Radiologists and radiographers should be
    specifically trained for paediatrics
  • A paediatric radiological procedure should be
    individually planned and projections should be
    limited to what is absolutely necessary for a
    diagnosis

Radiation Protection in Paediatric Radiology
L03.Radiation protection in screen-film
radiography
6
7
General recommendations
  • Key areas in radiation protection in paediatric
  • radiology
  • Justification
  • Optimisation
  • Evaluation of patient dose and image quality
  • Do you really need a glossy picture to
  • make that diagnosis

8
Justification in radiography
  • Justification is required for all radiographic
    studies
  • Ask referring practitioner, patient, and/or
    family about previous procedures
  • Use referral guidelines where appropriate and
    available
  • Use alternative approaches, such as ultrasound,
    MRI where appropriate
  • Consent, implied or explicit, is required for
    justification
  • Include justification in clinical audit

9
Justification in radiography
  • Referral guidelines for radiological
    examinations
  • EUROPEAN COMMISSION, Referral Guidelines for
    Imaging, Luxembourg, Radiation Protection 118,
    Office for Official Publications of the European
    Communities, Luxembourg (2001) and Update (2008)
  • THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF RADIOLOGISTS, Making the
    Best use of Clinical Radiology Services (MBUR),
    6th edition, RCR, London (2007)

10
Examples of radiography examinations not
routinely indicated
  • Skull radiograph in a child with epilepsy
  • Skull radiograph in a child with headaches
  • Sinus radiograph in a child, under 5 years,
    suspected of having sinusitis
  • Cervical spine radiograph in a child with
    torticollis without trauma
  • Radiographs of the opposite side for comparison
    in limb injury

11
Optimisation in radiography
  • Justified studies must be optimised
  • Various actions taken contribute to systematic
    dose savings (from a factor of two to ten, with
    the result that their combined effect can
    dramatically reduce dose)
  • Sustain good practice through a quality assurance
    and constancy checking program

12
Optimisation in radiography
  • Selection of equipment
  • Influence on patient dose and image quality
  • But, good radiographic technique is the main
    factor in improving quality without increasing
    dose

13
Practical optimisation measures in radiography (I)
  • Have a standard type and number of projections
    for specific indications
  • Views in addition to standard should only be
    performed on a case-by-case basis
  • Use manual technique selection pending equipment
    developments on small patients or body parts
  • Where practical use a long (or the recommended)
    Focus-to-Film Distance

14
Practical optimisation measures in radiography
(II)
  • Carefully collimate the X-ray beam to area of
    interest, excluding other regions, especially
    gonads, breast, thyroid and eyes
  • Use appropriate gonad, thyroid, and breast
    shielding
  • Fast film-screen combinations are acceptable for
    the majority of indications
  • Antiscatter grid is often unnecessary in children
    do not use grid for abdominal examination in
    patients under age of 3, for skull radiography
    for patients under age of 1 and any fluoroscopy
    examination unless high detail is required (Cook,
    V. Imaging, (13) 2001229238)

15
Practical optimisation measures in radiography
(III)
  • Use PA projections, where practical, for chest
    and spine radiographs
  • Make sure the correct filtration is used to
    reduce entry dose
  • Use as high a kVp as is consistent with
    examination requirements
  • Consider additional filtration at higher kVp
  • Balance the use of a small focal spot size and
    short exposure times

16
Practical optimisation measures in radiography
(IV)
  • Use of quality assessment, quality assurance and
    audit programs for all aspects of the
    departments work, including film processing and
    justification
  • Introduce and use a system that allows patient
    dose be assessed regularly
  • Monitor reject rate and the causes (overexposure,
    underexposure, positioning, motion, and
    collimation problems)

17
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 1. Generators
  • For paediatric examinations, the generator
    should be
  • a high frequency
  • multi-pulse (converter)
  • of sufficient power
  • nearly rectangular waveform with minimal
    voltage ripple

18
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 2. Exposure time
  • When children are uncooperative they may need
    immobilization
  • They have faster heart and respiratory rates
  • Short exposure times improve quality without
    increasing dose
  • Only possible with powerful generators and
    accurate exposure time switches

19
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 3. Focal Spot
  • Small focal spot
  • Improves image quality
  • May in some machines increase exposure time and
    motion artefacts
  • Choice depends on exposure parameters time, kVp
    and FFD (Focus-to-Film Distance)
  • Recommendation focal spot should be 0.6 -1.3mm

20
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 4. Additional filtration
  • Additional filtration may lead to dose reduction
  • 0.1 mm of Cu in addition to 2.5 mm of Al
  • reduce ESAK by 20
  • barely noticeable reduction in image quality
  • Some modern systems can automatically insert
    either 0.1mm or 0.2 mm Cu depending on the
    examination

Cook, V., Imaging, (13) 2001229238
21
Dose reduction with added filtration
Added filtration 0 mm Al 3 mm Al
Examination Mean ESD (?Gy) Reduction
Abdomen AP 10 months (62 kVp) 200 30
Chest AP 10 months (55 kVp) 64 40
Pelvis AP 4 months (50 kVp) 94 51
From Mooney and Thomas Dose reduction in a
paediatric X-ray department following
optimization of radiographic technique, BJR (77)
1998852-860
22
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 5. Exposure factors
  • Increased kVp (reduced mAs)
  • Greater penetration and less absorption
  • Reduced patient dose for a constant film density
  • Neonatal chest
  • Minimum 60kVp less contrast but better
    assessment of lung parenchyma
  • Lower kVp if looking for bone detail

23
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 6. Antiscatter grid
  • Often unnecessary in children because smaller
    irradiated volume (and mass) results in less
    scattered radiation.
  • Limited improvement in image quality but
    increased dose of 50 with the use of
    antiscatter grids

24
Antiscatter grids
  • Antiscatter grid should be removable in
    paediatric equipment
  • Remove antiscatter grid for
  • abdominal imaging in young children especially lt3
    years old
  • skull imaging lt1 year old
  • in most fluoroscopic imaging

Cook, V., Imaging, (13) 2001229238
25
Antiscatter grids
  • If used for children,
  • Antiscatter grids should have
  • Grid ratio (r) gt 81
  • Line numbers gt100 cm-1
  • Low attenuation intersperse material, such as
    carbon fibre
  • Alternative air gap technique
  • (reduces the effect of scatter
  • without dose increase, but the
  • image is magnified)

Cook, V., Imaging, (13) 2001229238
26
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 7. Automatic Exposure Control (AEC)
  • Generally not appropriate for small children
  • Sensors (size and geometry) are normally designed
    for adult patients
  • AEC use may be associated with the use of the
    grid (where the grid is not removable), which is
    frequently unnecessary
  • AEC should have specific technical requirements
    for paediatrics
  • If not appropriate or available, carefully
    applied exposure charts are preferred

27
Automatic Exposure Control
  • Specially designed paediatric AEC
  • Small mobile detector for use behind a lead-free
    cassette
  • Position can be selected with respect to the most
    important region of interest
  • This must be done extremely carefully, as even
    minor patient movement may be disastrous

28
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 8. Focus-to-film distance (FFD)
  • Longer focus-to-film distances
  • Smaller skin dose
  • Combined with a small object-to-film distance,
    results in less magnification (less geometric
    distortion) and improved quality

29
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 9. Image receptors
  • Fast screen-film combinations have advantages
    (reduction of dose) and limitations (reduced
    resolution)
  • Low-absorbing materials in cassettes, tables,
    etc., are specially important in paediatric
    radiology (carbon fibre)

30
Film-screen systems
  • Fast screen-film system
  • shorter exposure times (requires a good
    generator)
  • reduction in radiation dose and prevention of
    artefacts
  • Recommendations
  • 200 speed bone
  • 400 speed general
  • gt700 speed constipation transit abdominal
    radiographs, follow-up films, e.g. scoliosis and
    hips, swallowed foreign body,

31
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 10. Collimation
  • The most important factor for improving image
    quality whilst also reducing dose
  • The most common radiographic fault
  • Good collimation/coning is essential to achieve
    better contrast and avoid exposing unnecessarily
    other body parts (dose reduction)
  • Body parts outside the region of interest should
    not be in the X-ray field

32
Collimation
  • Require a basic knowledge of paediatric pathology
  • Lung fields extremely large in congestive heart
    failure emphysematous pulmonary diseases
  • Diaphragm, high in intestinal meteorism, chronic
    obstruction or digestive diseases
  • Beam-limiting devices automatically adjusting the
    field size to the full size of the cassette are
    inappropriate for children
  • Minimal deviation from the radiation and light
    beam may have large effects in relation to the
    usually small field of interest - check light
    beam diaphragm regularly

33
Collimation
  • Alignment agreement among the collimators,
    radiation beam and the light beam must be
    regularly assessed
  • Beyond the neonatal period, the tolerance for
    maximal field size should be less than 2 cm
    greater than the minimal
  • In the neonatal period, the tolerance level
    should be reduced to 1.0 cm at each edge
  • In paediatric patients, evidence of the field
    limits should be apparent by clear rims of
    unexposed film

34
Cook, J.V., Imaging, 13 (2001), 229238
Neonatal anteroposterior supine chest and abdomen
radiograph of newborn all four cone marks
visible, with no extraneous body parts included
and lead masking of the gonads.
Lateral skull radiograph (horizontal beam
and round cone)
35
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 11. Shielding
  • Standard equipment of lead-rubber shielding of
    the body in the immediate proximity of the
    diagnostic field
  • Special shielding has to be added for certain
    examinations to protect against external
    scattered and extra-focal radiation

36
Shielding
  • For exposures of 60 - 80 kV, maximum gonadal dose
    reduction of about 30 to 40 can be obtained by
    shielding with 0.25 mm lead equivalent rubber
    immediately at the field edge
  • However, this is only true when the protection is
    placed correctly at the field edge

36
37
Shielding
  • The gonads in "hot examinations", when they lie
    within or close to (nearer than 5 cm) the primary
    beam, should be protected whenever this is
    possible without impairing necessary diagnostic
    information
  • It is best to make one's own lead contact shields
    for girls and lead capsules for boys
  • Must be available in varied sizes

37
38
Shielding
  • With appropriate shielding the absorbed dose in
    the testes can be reduced by up to 95
  • In girls, shadow masks within the diaphragm of
    the collimator are as efficient as direct
    shields.
  • When shielding of the female gonads is effective,
    the reduction of the absorbed dose in the ovaries
    can be about 50

38
39
Shielding
  • The eyes should be shielded for X-ray
    examinations involving high absorbed doses in the
    eyes, e.g., for conventional tomography of the
    petrous bone, when patient cooperation permits
  • The absorbed dose in the eyes can be reduced by
    50 - 70
  • In any radiography of the skull the use of
    PA-projection rather than the AP-projection can
    reduce the absorbed dose in the eyes by 95

39
40
Equipment, practice, dose and image quality
  • 12. Patient Positioning and Immobilization
  • Patient positioning must be exact, whether or not
    the patient co-operates.
  • In infants, toddlers and younger children
    immobilization devices, properly applied, must
    ensure that
  • the patient does not move
  • the beam can be centred correctly
  • the film is obtained in the proper projection
  • accurate collimation limits the field size
    exclusively to the required area
  • shielding of the remainder of the body is
    possible.

41
Patient Positioning and Immobilization
42
Patient Positioning and Immobilization
  • Immobilization devices must be easy to use
  • Their usefulness should be explained to the
    accompanying parent(s)
  • Radiological staff members should only hold a
    patient under exceptional circumstances
  • Even in quite young children the time allocation
    for an examination must include the time to
    explain the procedure not only to the parents but
    also to the child

43
Mobile radiography
  • Mobile radiography is valuable on occasions when
    it is impossible for the patient to come to the
    radiology department
  • It can result in
  • poorer quality images
  • unnecessary staff and patient exposures
  • Where practicable, X-ray examinations should be
    carried out with fixed units in an imaging
    department
  • Mobile units should only be used with those who
    cannot safely be moved to such a unit

44
Mobile radiography
  • High output converter generators are recommended
  • Capacitor discharge systems should be avoided
    (they have significant pre- and post-peak soft
    radiation)
  • Appropriate collimation is
  • essential to avoid exposing
  • organs outside the diagnostic
  • area of interest
  • Other principles outlined above, should be
    followed with mobile radiography

45
Mobile radiography
  • Scattered radiation must be managed to reduce
    dose to the patient, parents/guardians and to
    hospital personnel
  • The advice of the medical physicist/radiation
    protection officer should be obtained on how best
    to do this.

46
Mobile radiography
  • Recommendations for Intensive Care Unit
  • (Duetting et. al. Pediat. Radiol. 29 158-62
    (1999))
  • No additional protection for neighbouring
    premature infants is necessary
  • The radiographer should wear a lead apron
  • Parents and personnel need not interrupt their
    activities or leave the room during an X-ray
    examination
  • When using a horizontal beam, the beam, must be
    directed away from other persons use lead
    shield

47
Criteria related to images
  • Incorrect positioning is the most frequent cause
    of inadequate image quality in paediatric
    radiographs
  • Image criteria for the assessment of adequate
    positioning (symmetry and absence of tilting etc)
    are much more important in paediatric imaging
    than in adults
  • A lower level of image quality than in adults may
    be acceptable for certain clinical indications

48
Criteria related to images
  • Guideline resources
  • European Guidelines on Quality Criteria for
    Diagnostic Radiographic Images in Paediatrics
  • American College of Radiology

49
Quality Criteria List
50
Chest-PA/AP projection
50
51
Chest radiography-PA/AP projection
52
Typical dose levels in paediatric radiography
Examination ESAK (µGy) ESAK (µGy) ESAK (µGy) ESAK (µGy) ESAK (µGy)
Examination Age Age Age Age Age
Examination 0 1 5 10 15
Abdomen AP 110 340 590 860 2010
Chest PA/AP 60 80 110 70 110
Pelvis AP 170 350 510 650 1300
Skull AP / 600 1250 / /
Skull LAT / 340 580 / /
NATIONAL RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION BOARD, Doses to
Patient from Medical X Ray Examinations in the
UK 2000 review, NRPB-W14, Chilton (2002).
53
ICRP-ISR smart message for paediatrics
54
http//rpop.iaea.org/RPoP/RPoP/Content/index.htm
55
Summary
  • Particular attention should be given to technical
    specifications of X-ray equipment
  • Good radiographic technique is the main factor in
    improving quality without increasing dose for
    protocols used in X-ray paediatric radiology
  • Justification of practice
  • Application of practical optimisation measures in
    radiography

55
56
Answer True or False
  • Added filtration will reduce the dose to the
    patient.
  • Short exposure time is a disadvantage.
  • Proper collimation reduce dose.
  • Shielding of radiosensitive organs is recommended
    in paediatric radiography.

57
Answer True or False
  1. True - Filtration absorbs low energy photons that
    are absorbed in patients skin and superficial
    organs and thus giving contributing to dose but
    not to image formation.
  2. False - It prevents motion artefacts and
    unnecessary repetitions.
  3. True - Collimation reduces exposed volume, and
    reduces scatter radiation that affects both image
    quality and dose.
  4. True - It is especially important for
    radiosensitive organs as breast, gonads and eyes.

Radiation Protection in Paediatric Radiology
L03.Radiation protection in screen-film
radiography
57
58
References
  • European Guidelines on Quality Criteria for
    Diagnostic Radiographic Images in Paediatrics,
    July 1996. EUR 16261. Available at
    http//www.cordis.lu/fp5-euratom/src/lib_docs.htm
  • Huda W, Assessment of the problem paediatric
    doses in screen-film and digital radiography,
    Pediatr Radiol 34(Suppl 3) 2004S173-S182
  • Duetting,Foerste,Knoch,Darge and Troeger,
    Radiation exposure during chest X-ray
    examinations in a premature intensive care unit
    phantom studies, Pediatr Radiol (29) 1999158-162
  • Mooney and Thomas Dose reduction in a
    paediatric X-ray department following
    optimization of radiographic technique, BJR (77)
    1998852-860
  • Cook, V., Radiation protection and quality
    assurance in paediatric radiology, Imaging, (13)
    2001229238.
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