OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE FROM COMMON FLUOROSCOPIC PROJECTIONS USED IN ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY
- 1 September 2003
- journal article
- Published by Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
- Vol. 85 (9), 1698-1703
- https://doi.org/10.2106/00004623-200309000-00007
Abstract
Background: Personnel assisting in or performing fluoroscopically guided procedures may be exposed to high doses of radiation. Accurate occupational dosimetric data for the orthopaedic theater staff are of paramount importance for practicing radiation safety. Methods: Fluoroscopic screening was performed on an anthropomorphic phantom with use of four projections common in image-guided orthopaedic surgery. The simulated projections were categorized, according to the imaged anatomic area and the beam orientation, as (1) hip joint posterior-anterior, (2) hip joint lateral cross-table 45°, (3) lumbar spine anterior-posterior, and (4) lumbar spine lateral 90°. The scattered air kerma rate was measured on a grid surrounding the operating table. For each grid point, the effective dose, eye lens dose, and face skin dose values, normalized over the tube dose area product, were derived. For the effective dose calculations, three radiation protection conditions were considered: (1) with the exposed personnel using no protection measures, (2) with the exposed personnel wearing a 0.5-mm lead-equivalent protective apron, and (3) with the exposed personnel wearing both an apron and a thyroid collar. Maximum permissible workloads for typical hip, spine, and kyphoplasty procedures were derived on the basis of compliance with effective dose, eye lens dose, and skin dose limits. Results: We found that the effective dose, eye lens dose, and face skin dose to an orthopaedic surgeon wearing a 0.5-mm lead-equivalent apron will not exceed the corresponding limits if the dose area product of the fluoroscopically guided procedure is 2. When protective eye goggles are also worn, the maximum permissible dose area product increases to 0.70 Gy m 2, while the additional use of a thyroid shield allows a workload of 1.20 Gy m 2. The effective dose to the orthopaedic surgeon working tableside during a typical hip, spine, kyphoplasty procedure was 5.1, 21, and 250 μSv, respectively, when a 0.5-mm lead-equivalent apron alone was used. The additional use of a thyroid shield reduced the effective dose to 2.4, 8.4, and 96 μSv per typical hip, spine, and kyphoplasty procedure, respectively. Conclusions: The levels of occupational exposure vary considerably with the type of fluoroscopically assisted procedure, staff positioning, and the radiation protection measures used. The data presented in the current study will allow for accurate estimation of the occupational dose to orthopaedic theater personnel.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Scattered radiation during fixation of hip fracturesThe Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British volume, 2001
- Radiation Exposure to the Spine Surgeon During Fluoroscopically Assisted Pedicle Screw InsertionSpine, 2000
- Radiation Exposure During Fluoroscopically Assisted Pedicle Screw Insertion in the Lumbar SpineSpine, 2000
- Ionising radiation during internal fixation of extracepsular neck of femur fracturesInjury, 1998
- Exposure of the surgeon to radiation during surgeryInternational Orthopaedics, 1998
- Radiation exposure to the hands and the thyroid of the surgeon during intramedullary nailingInjury, 1998
- Exposure of the orthopaedic surgeon to radiation.The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1994
- Radiation exposure to the hands of orthopaedic surgeons during procedures under fluoroscopic X-ray controlThe British Journal of Radiology, 1993
- Hazard of ionizing radiation to trauma surgeons: reducing the riskInjury, 1993
- Exposure of the orthopaedic surgeon to radiation.The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1993