Answer to Question #11245 Submitted to "Ask the Experts"
Category: Medical and Dental Equipment/Shielding — Shielding
The following question was answered by an expert in the appropriate field:
Why isn't the head normally covered during an x ray with some sort of lead protection? Why is there only thyroid, abdominal, and gonad lead protection?
The short answer is that the cells of the thyroid, abdomen, and gonads are more sensitive to the effects of x rays, and exposure of these cells and organs is more likely to increase the risk of developing cancer later. Lead protective shields are used for patients and staff to reduce the risk from the radiation that is scattered from the anatomical areas being imaged. The brain is much less sensitive to radiation so exposure to the head is not very likely to cause cancer.
For patients, shielding is most often used for sensitive parts of the body that are close to, but not in, the part that is being imaged. When the lead protection is in the x-ray field, it can hide what the physician needs to see and lead to additional x rays being needed. When the head is not being imaged, it receives a very small amount of scattered radiation from the x ray. In the majority of cases, the use of lead shielding on the head would be uncomfortable and have little or no benefit.
Deirdre H. Elder, MS, CHP, CMLSO
References
- Answer to Question No. 10276 submitted to Ask the Experts
- IAEA Cataract Study