Answer to Question #9545 Submitted to "Ask the Experts"
Category: Medical and Dental Equipment and Shielding — Lead Aprons
The following question was answered by an expert in the appropriate field:
I am a radiographer and have recently been doing some work in a pain clinic whereby using a fluoroscopic C-arm you can screen to show the position of a needle for various procedures (such as nerve root block etc.).
The physician often asks for the C-Arm to be rotated in an oblique manner (i.e., under the table and over, going in an anterior/posterior to a lateral position around the patient's body in a C-arm movement) while screening at the same time.
This has raised some concern with me. To rotate the C-arm means I am very close to the source of the x-ray tube, and more often than not the tube is pointing towards me. As we are usually visualizing the lumbar spine, the factor of scatter is also a concern.
I wear a lead gown and a thyroid protector and, of course, I try and keep far away from the C-arm but my arms are not very long! I am literally 30 cm from the tube.
Should I be concerned? Would you feel comfortable doing this? Should I say something to the physician or just follow his screening orders?
If you are wearing a lead apron and thyroid shield, this should adequately protect you.
Besides, for these kinds of procedures the beam-on time is pretty short. You are exposed to x rays only when the beam is on (that is, when the pedal is being pushed).
When you rotate the C-arm, try to stay closer to the image intensifier (and further from the x-ray tube). That will reduce your exposure from scatter radiation from the x-ray tube side of the patient.
The beam is pretty well collimated, but there could be a little exposure.
Remember, most of the dose that you get is from the scatter radiation coming from the patient, not the x-ray tube. So the farther you are from the patient, the less the exposure as well. If you can move two steps back while the pedal is being pushed, that would help. The inverse square law works very well to your benefit in this situation.
Are you wearing a radiation dosimeter? I am not sure what the policy in your institution is, but we typically provide at least a collar badge (radiation dosimeter) to those who are standing by the side of the patient during fluoroscopy. If your deep dose equivalent readings per quarter do not exceed 1.25 millisieverts, you are below 10% of the typical annual dose limit. If they are above 1.25 millisieverts per quarter (deep dose), you should try to increase distance as described above.
Ninni Jacob, CHP
Ken "Duke" Lovins, MS, CHP