X-ray technique puts medical staff at risk

By Corin Kelly
Wednesday, 13 April, 2016


Heart procedures that involve the use of X-rays may dramatically increase the risk of health problems ranging from cataracts to cancer suffered by medical staff, a study has found.
An X-ray technique called fluoroscopy is routinely used to obtain real-time moving images of the heart. Two common procedures that employ it are coronary angiography, for diagnosing heart problems, and angioplasty to widen narrowed arteries.
Fluoroscopy is used so often that over time the effects of radiation exposure on busy health professionals can be considerable.
Over a 30-year career a cardiologist might receive the dose equivalent of 2,500 to 10,000 chest X-rays.
Researchers have now recorded a catalogue of disorders that are significantly more likely to be suffered by doctors, nurses and technicians involved in fluoroscopy-assisted heart procedures over a typical period of 10 years.
Compared with health workers not exposed to radiation, they were 2.8 times more likely to have a skin abnormality, 7.1 times more likely to develop orthopaedic back, neck or knee problems, and 6.3 times more likely to suffer from cataracts.
Those who had been doing the work for more than 16 years were also three times more likely to develop cancer.
In addition, exposed staff had increased rates of high blood pressure and cholesterol, but relatively low rates of heart disease.
Dr Maria Andreassi, from the National Research Council Institute of Clinical Physiology in Pisa, Italy, who led the study, said: "Occupational doses of radiation in cardiovascular procedures guided by fluoroscopy are the highest doses registered among medical staff using X-rays.
"Interventional cardiologists and electrophysiologists have a two to three times higher annual exposure than that of radiologists, as they are closer to the radiological source and experience radiation exposure with the patient, whereas diagnostic radiologists are generally shielded from radiation exposure."
The findings, published in the American Heart Association journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions, are from a survey of 466 individuals employed in hospital cardiac catheterisation (cath) labs and 280 professionals who worked in other settings.
(1) Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/pa/article-3536670/Medical-staff-risk-heart-procedure-X-rays.html#ixzz45f5zKHfn

Related Articles

Losing our minds — an AU$85bn phenomenon

There is a storm brewing, largely unnoticed: the convergence of two high-prevalence, high-impact...

Upholding a new model of mental health care

The Ipswich Hospital Mental Health Acute Inpatient Service was recently recognised at the...

Enhancing hearing loss diagnostics and outcomes in primary care

Hearing health is integral to overall physical and emotional wellbeing, yet it often remains...


  • All content Copyright © 2024 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd