Answer to Question #13045 Submitted to "Ask the Experts"
Category: Medical and Dental Equipment and Shielding — Equipment
The following question was answered by an expert in the appropriate field:
What is the approximate amount of radiation exposure to someone if that person was present in a computerized tomography (CT) room while a CT scan was taking place? I was standing in a corner of the room facing the opening of the scanner but not directly in its path, between 2.1 m and 2.4 m in front of the scanner and behind a mobile lead glass shield (without an apron).
The total radiation dose to a person standing behind a lead glass shield inside the CT room during a procedure would be very low, likely around 0.1 milliSievert (mSv). In order to get a more accurate result, one would need measurement data for that room, the technique factors for that particular scan, and at the location where you were standing behind the shield. As a reference, the average person in the United States gets about 0.01 mSv of natural background radiation dose per day. The amount that you received is likely on the order of a few days of background radiation dose and, thus, very low. If you still have concerns, you can ask the facility to contact their medical physicist or radiation safety officer for a more detailed result based on their survey of that unit.
Kenith "Duke" Lovins, CHP