Effective Reduction of Radiation Exposure during Cardiac Catheterization

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2019-06Department
MedicinaSource
Tex Heart Inst J 2019;46(3):167-71Abstract
Exposure to ionizing radiation during cardiac catheterization can have harmful consequences
for patients and for the medical staff involved in the procedures. Minimizing radiation
doses during the procedures is essential. We investigated whether fine-tuning the radiation
protocol reduces radiation doses in the cardiac catheterization laboratory.
In January 2016, we implemented a new protocol with reduced radiation doses in
the Hospital de Jerez catheterization laboratory. We analyzed 170 consecutive coronary
interventional procedures (85 of which were performed after the new protocol was implemented)
and the personal dosimeters of the interventional cardiologists who performed
the procedures.
Overall, the low-radiation protocol reduced air kerma (dose of radiation) by 44.9% (95%
CI, 18.4%–70.8%; P=0.001). The dose-area product decreased by 61% (95% CI, 30.2%–
90.1%; P <0.001) during percutaneous coronary interventions. We also found that the annual
deep (79%, P=0.026) and shallow (62.2%, P=0.035) radiation doses to which primary
operators were exposed decreased significantly under the low-radiation protocol. These
dose reductions were achieved without increasing the volume of contrast media, fluoroscopy
time, or rates of procedural complications, and without reducing the productivity of
the laboratory.
Optimizing the radiation safety protocol effectively reduced radiation exposure in patients
and operators during cardiac catheterization procedures.
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