Estimating radiation exposure of the brain of a physician with a protective flap in interventional radiology: A phantom study

Purpose The efficiency of protective equipment for the brain has not been verified at the left anterior oblique (LAO) position, which is commonly used in clinical procedures. The purpose of this study was to investigate radiation exposure of the brain in interventional radiology (IR) and the shieldi...

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Published inJournal of applied clinical medical physics Vol. 23; no. 3; pp. e13532 - n/a
Main Authors Hattori, Shota, Monzen, Hajime, Tamura, Mikoto, Kosaka, Hiroyuki, Nakamura, Yasunori, Nishimura, Yasumasa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.03.2022
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:Purpose The efficiency of protective equipment for the brain has not been verified at the left anterior oblique (LAO) position, which is commonly used in clinical procedures. The purpose of this study was to investigate radiation exposure of the brain in interventional radiology (IR) and the shielding ability of a new protective flap. Methods We made a flap that combined a protective cap with a left lateral face shield. The flap was made of tungsten‐containing rubber (TCR). An anthropomorphic head phantom was placed at the physician's position, and air kerma rates (μGy/min and μGy/15s) were measured by electronic dosimeter at three locations: the surface of the left side of the head, and the left and right temporal lobes with the protective cap and the flap in fluoroscopy and cine modes. The X‐ray tube was at the lower left side of the physician, and its angles were LAO60 and LAO60CAU40. The tube voltage (95–125 kV), tube current (4.7–732 mA), and air kerma rate (27.8–1078 mGy/min) were automatically adjusted by the X‐ray system. We obtained the cap and the flap shielding efficiencies. Results In cine mode at LAO60CAU40, the shielding efficiencies on the surface of the left side of the head and left temporal lobe with the cap were 92.6% and 5.1%, respectively, and the corresponding shielding efficiencies with the flap were 92.5% and 86.1%, respectively. The flap can reduce radiation exposure of the brain more than the cap alone. Conclusions At the left anterior oblique in interventional radiology, the flap can reduce exposure to the brain.
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ISSN:1526-9914
1526-9914
DOI:10.1002/acm2.13532