Difference between revisions of "Application of ionising radiation in healthcare"
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[[file:figure 1.1.3.jpg|200px|thumb|'''Figure 1:''' Example of plain film radiography]] | [[file:figure 1.1.3.jpg|200px|thumb|'''Figure 1:''' Example of plain film radiography]] | ||
[[file:Brain-Computed tomography.jpg|200px|thumb|'''Figure 2:''' Example of brain Computed tomography ([https://www.researchgate.net/publication/5822266])]] | [[file:Brain-Computed tomography.jpg|200px|thumb|'''Figure 2:''' Example of brain Computed tomography ([https://www.researchgate.net/publication/5822266])]] | ||
[[file:Pet_CT.jpg|200px|thumb|'''Figure 3:''' Example of true positive metastatic lesions detected by 18F-FDG PET/CT restaging (Courtesy: Eur. J. Nucl. Med. Mol. Imaging, 45: 1742/CC By 4.0)]] | [[file:Pet_CT.jpg|200px|thumb|'''Figure 3:''' Example of true positive metastatic lesions detected by 18F-FDG PET/CT restaging (Courtesy: Eur. J. Nucl. Med. Mol. Imaging, 45: 1742/CC By 4.0)]] | ||
+ | Diagnostic radiology, the imaging modalities using ionizing radiation, produces images of anatomical internal structures of human organs and physiological (functional) biological systems and helps significantly improve patient management and care in screening and diagnosis, assessing treatment response, predicting prognosis, and detecting disease recurrence. Modern diagnostic radiology assures faster, more precise diagnosis and enables monitoring of a large proportion of diseases. It has been estimated that in about one half of all cases, radiological procedures (conventional radiography, fluoroscopy, computed tomography) have a substantial impact on the speed of diagnosis and in a large fraction of cases they are of decisive importance in guiding patient management and therapy. | ||
In diagnostic radiology, x rays, produced by machines, are transmitted through the patient’s body and detected by a receptor (or detection) system to generate the required image of the organs under investigation. The differential absorption of x rays in tissues and organs, owing to their atomic composition, is the basis for the various imaging methods used in diagnostic radiology. Modern diagnostic radiology uses a digital process for image acquisition, transfer, process and storage. Over the past years, with the tremendous technological progress and collaborative efforts in radiation protection, the radiation doses used in diagnostic radiology have been significantly reduced and continue to be reduced through technological innovations especially in CT ([[ICRP Publication 135]] Diagnostic Reference Levels in Medical Imaging; [[ICRP Publication 121]] Radiological Protection in Paediatric Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology; [[ICRP Publication 105]] Radiological Protection in Medicine; [[ICRP Publication 93]] Managing Patient Dose in Digital Radiology). | In diagnostic radiology, x rays, produced by machines, are transmitted through the patient’s body and detected by a receptor (or detection) system to generate the required image of the organs under investigation. The differential absorption of x rays in tissues and organs, owing to their atomic composition, is the basis for the various imaging methods used in diagnostic radiology. Modern diagnostic radiology uses a digital process for image acquisition, transfer, process and storage. Over the past years, with the tremendous technological progress and collaborative efforts in radiation protection, the radiation doses used in diagnostic radiology have been significantly reduced and continue to be reduced through technological innovations especially in CT ([[ICRP Publication 135]] Diagnostic Reference Levels in Medical Imaging; [[ICRP Publication 121]] Radiological Protection in Paediatric Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology; [[ICRP Publication 105]] Radiological Protection in Medicine; [[ICRP Publication 93]] Managing Patient Dose in Digital Radiology). |
Revision as of 13:44, 10 September 2019
Application of ionising radiation in healthcare is basic and routine in contemporary medicine. Benefits to patients from such application have been established beyond doubt (ICRP Publication 105 Radiological Protection in Medicine). It is difficult to imagine a healthcare system without modern diagnostic imaging and image-guided interventional procedures. A survey of policy leaders in internal medicine rated computed tomography (CT) imaging as one of the main healthcare innovations in the 20th century (Fuchs and Sox, 2001 [2]). The applications of ionising radiation in healthcare include the following topics.
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Contents
Introduction
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Diagnostic Radiology

Diagnostic radiology, the imaging modalities using ionizing radiation, produces images of anatomical internal structures of human organs and physiological (functional) biological systems and helps significantly improve patient management and care in screening and diagnosis, assessing treatment response, predicting prognosis, and detecting disease recurrence. Modern diagnostic radiology assures faster, more precise diagnosis and enables monitoring of a large proportion of diseases. It has been estimated that in about one half of all cases, radiological procedures (conventional radiography, fluoroscopy, computed tomography) have a substantial impact on the speed of diagnosis and in a large fraction of cases they are of decisive importance in guiding patient management and therapy.
In diagnostic radiology, x rays, produced by machines, are transmitted through the patient’s body and detected by a receptor (or detection) system to generate the required image of the organs under investigation. The differential absorption of x rays in tissues and organs, owing to their atomic composition, is the basis for the various imaging methods used in diagnostic radiology. Modern diagnostic radiology uses a digital process for image acquisition, transfer, process and storage. Over the past years, with the tremendous technological progress and collaborative efforts in radiation protection, the radiation doses used in diagnostic radiology have been significantly reduced and continue to be reduced through technological innovations especially in CT (ICRP Publication 135 Diagnostic Reference Levels in Medical Imaging; ICRP Publication 121 Radiological Protection in Paediatric Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology; ICRP Publication 105 Radiological Protection in Medicine; ICRP Publication 93 Managing Patient Dose in Digital Radiology).
Diagnostic radiology are mainly applied in the areas: (1) Digital general radiology (DR); (2) Mammography; (3) Fluoroscopy systems; (4) Mobile radiography and fluoroscopy; (5) Bone density scan (DXA); (6) Computed tomography (CT); (7) Conventional tomography and tomosynthesis; (8) Dental radiography / CBCT; (9) Nuclear medicine including hybrid imaging (SPECT/CT, PET/CT, PET/MRI); (10) Cardiology; (11) Neuroradiology; and (12) Paediatrics.
Interventional Procedures
Interventional procedures using ionising radiation have revolutionised medicine in the past few decades for therapy and palliation, resulting in more patients being offered treatments that would not have been possible before with more invasive open surgery. The vast majority of interventional procedures are performed as “minimal invasive percutaneous therapies”.
As technology continues to advance, interventional procedures become more complex and some may take several hours to complete. New technologies with smaller catheters, guidewires, stents, filters and many other devices also present new challenges for radiological protection, such as aortic stent grafts, cardiac valve replacement, prostate embolisation, thrombus aspiration after stroke or selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT).
After CT, Interventional radiology is the second largest collective source of medical radiation exposure and, together with nuclear medicine the highest source of exposure to healthcare providers. ICRP has provided practical advice for physicians and other healthcare providers on the protection of patients and themselves involved in the interventions, for example in the following publications:
- ICRP Publication 139 Occupational Radiological Protection in Interventional Procedures
- ICRP Publication 121 Radiological Protection in Paediatric Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
- ICRP Publication 120 Radiological Protection in Cardiology
- ICRP Publication 117 Radiological Protection in Fluoroscopically Guided Procedures outside the Imaging Department
- ICRP Publication 105 Radiological Protection in Medicine
- ICRP Publication 85 Avoidance of Radiation Injuries from Medical Interventional Procedures
Physicians, assisted by nurses and radiographers, perform X-ray guided interventions as an alternative to conventional surgery. Most of these interventions are less invasive, the recovery periods are shorter, and for many types of interventions the complication rate is lower. In addition, some patients who may not tolerate anaesthesia and conventional surgery, as well as lesions that were not previously accessible, can now be treated by less-invasive image-guided interventions. In addition, interventional procedures offer new therapies where options of other medical specialties do not exist, such as embolization of liver tumours with chemical drugs or radioisotopes (SIRT).
The number of image guided interventions is increasing continuously in both developed and developing countries. New types of interventions are also of increased complexity, require extensive use of X-ray imaging, and raise new issues of occupational and patient protection.
Interventions are usually guided by fluoroscopy. Radiographic cine series or stored images from fluoroscopy are taken to document the outcome of diagnosis or treatment. Interventions can also be guided by computed tomography (CT) imaging, with images taken while the interventionalist steps behind a shield or out of the room, or by CT fluoroscopy, in which the interventionalist stays at the patient for obtaining images during device manipulation.
Radiation Therapy
Radiation therapy utilizes ionizing radiation to treat malignant and benign diseases. It has become a standard of care for treating many types of cancer. Current medical practice uses radiation therapy in about half of all newly diagnosed cancer cases. Radiation therapy works by exploiting radiobiological differences between cancer and normal cells/tissues, and by depositing radiation dose in cancer tumours while keeping doses to surrounding normal tissues below damaging thresholds as much as possible.
Radiation therapy is used as a primary, curative treatment, as a palliative treatment, and/or as adjunctive therapy. It can be used pre-operatively or post-operatively, and in combination with chemotherapy, biologic agents, and hormonal agents. The radiation dose prescribed to achieve tumour control is often limited by the radiosensitivity of normal tissues, which are located around the tumour, and thus may result in early and late adverse side effects. Some adverse effects are unavoidable and often resolve spontaneously or with treatment. Serious adverse effects may occur and result from the proximity of sensitive normal tissues to the treatment area. However, such adverse side effects do not undermine the purpose of radiation therapy. Appropriate use of radiation therapy saves millions of lives every year. Even if only palliative treatment is possible, the therapy reduces suffering substantially. There are also a few non-malignant diseases whose treatment by radiation is a method of choice. Note that palliative radiotherapy and radiotherapy of non-malignant diseases uses much lower doses, generally not inducing any acute side effects.
Radiation therapy has benefited greatly from technological advances over the past two decades, resulting in a wide variety of available delivery methods: Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) utilizing techniques to quantify the critical normal tissue doses; Image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) utilizing real-time imaging for treatment localization during radiotherapy; Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) delivering of a large dose per fraction to treat focal brain lesions and its extension, stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT), to treat focal lesions in the lung, spine, liver, pancreas, prostate and all parts of the body; Particle beam radiotherapy utilizing protons, neutrons or other heavy particles; Brachytherapy placing sealed radioactive sources near the tumor; Intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) delivering to the surgical bed after removal of the tumor or to the tumor itself at the time of surgery; Unsealed sources delivering a radiopharmaceutical orally or parenterally; and Hyperthermia adding of heat to radiotherapy.
The advance of technology inevitably results in an increase in complexity and opportunities for new types of human error and equipment problems. Ongoing education and training of members of the radiotherapy team with respect to new and evolving technologies is crucial, as is adherence to clearly defined quality assurance policies and procedures.
- ICRP Publication 112 Preventing Accidental Exposures from New External Beam Radiation Therapy Technologies provides recommendation and guidance on preventing accidental exposures from new external beam radiation therapy technologies
- ICRP Publication 97 Prevention of High-dose-rate Brachytherapy Accidents and ICRP Publication 98 Radiation Safety Aspects of Brachytherapy for Prostate Cancer using Permanently Implanted Sources discuss safety aspects of brachytherapy
- ICRP Publication 127 Radiological Protection in Ion Beam Radiotherap addresses protection in ion beam radiotherapy
- ICRP Publication 86 Prevention of Accidents to Patients Undergoing Radiation Therapy covers prevention of accidental exposures to patients undergoing radiation therapy
Nuclear Medicine
Biomedical Research
Veterinary Medicine
More In-Depth Information
References