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Imaging Pregnant and Pediatric Patients, Dr M Mahesh (4-11-24)

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Hello and welcome to Noon Conference hosted by MRI Online

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by creating a free MRI online account.

0:30

Today we are honored to welcome Dr.

0:32

M Mahesh for a lectured entitled Imaging Pregnant

0:34

and Pediatric Patients.

0:36

Dr. Mahesh is the professor of radiology

0:38

and cardiology at the Johns Hopkins University School

0:41

of Medicine, as well as the chair

0:43

of the Radiation Control Committee

0:45

for the Johns Hopkins Health Systems.

0:48

Prior to that, he served as chief physicist

0:50

for the Johns Hopkins Hospital for over 29 years.

0:53

Dr. Mahesh has published over 150 peer review publications

0:57

and given more than 150 international talks

1:00

and several grand rounds.

1:02

Is the associate editor for the Journal of American College

1:04

of Radiology and is a member

1:06

of numerous societies committees and council.

1:09

At the end of the lecture, please join him in a q

1:11

and a session where he will address questions you may

1:13

have on today's topic.

1:14

Please remember to use the q

1:16

and a feature to submit your questions so we can get to

1:18

as many as we can before our time is up.

1:21

And with that, we're ready to begin today's lecture. Dr.

1:24

Mahesh, please take it from here.

1:26

Thank you first of all for the, for you guys

1:28

for inviting me to speak on this important topic.

1:32

Um, I'm gonna be talking on imaging pregnant

1:34

and pediatric patients.

1:37

Here Are my disclosures

1:42

and this is where I work.

1:45

So let me start this lecture on two topics.

1:48

One is, um, just to get this out of the this, out

1:52

of the confusion, I'm gonna be focusing imaging on pregnant

1:56

patient and pediatric patient, um, with respect

2:00

to X-ray imaging.

2:02

So having need to go more detail into that, let me start

2:05

with what is the MRI, what is the, uh, the issues

2:10

or conditions for MRI during pregnancy?

2:13

So let me start with that one.

2:15

And I wanna start with sharing this particular, um, um,

2:18

statement by the American College of AB Gynecology

2:22

basically recommends

2:23

that pregnant patients should be reviewed on a case

2:26

to case basis and risk benefit ratio needs to be made

2:30

by the physicians involved.

2:33

They also state that the, as of now,

2:35

there are no known biological effect of MRI on the fetus.

2:39

So it's safe to do MRI on pregnant patient, um, um,

2:43

because of the statement, you can make it.

2:45

However, they also state

2:47

that the gadolinium contrast should be awarded when

2:50

examining pregnant patient to support the statement.

2:53

There is a big article published in JAMA in 2016, um,

2:57

which examined the MRI exposure during pregnancy

3:01

and fetal and childhood outcome.

3:04

They looked at more than 1.4 million pregnancies.

3:08

Um, and the, with respect to the safety of the use of MRI

3:13

during pregnancy and the, the findings basically concluded

3:17

as follows, exposure to MRI during first trimester

3:21

of the pregnancy compared

3:23

with non exposure was not associated with increased risk

3:27

of harm to fetus or in early childhood.

3:31

And this is a very strong statement,

3:32

and this is based on the signs we know based on the current

3:37

magnetic field strength we are using in clinic.

3:39

Basically pregnant patient can be scanned in MRI,

3:43

however, if the use of gadolinium is always associated

3:47

with adverse outcomes, so it should be awarded.

3:50

So I just want to put this, uh, share this information

3:53

regarding the pregnancy, um, uh,

3:56

imaging pregnant patient using MRI scanner.

4:00

Now let me come to the main focus of my lecture.

4:04

I want to discuss and do different topics.

4:06

One is what is the radiation exposure during pregnancy

4:09

and why should we concerned or not concerned?

4:12

And what is their exposure in pediatric imaging?

4:15

I want to focus the talk imaging in pregnant

4:17

and pediatric patient under these subheadings

4:21

because there is lot of, um, um, myths

4:25

and concern of pre imaging pregnant patient.

4:28

And I want to answer some

4:29

of these question through this lecture.

4:32

First and foremost is the question everybody can ask is why

4:36

and when should we be concerned?

4:38

Because the moment the word radiation comes into picture,

4:41

we always have this concept in our mind.

4:44

And of course the media does not help

4:46

because we are a lot of Marvel comics, uh, stories

4:50

medias are talking about all ill effect of radiation.

4:54

And when we see these things, when,

4:56

because radiation we cannot hear taste

4:59

or smell, there is always concern about radiation

5:03

that automatically translate to

5:05

what happens when we do an imaging on pregnant patient

5:09

using x-rays.

5:11

And that is the main concern a lot of the people has.

5:15

We have, and I'm trying to answer some of these questions,

5:18

um, based for this imaging x-ray imaging.

5:21

First of all, when you talk about radiation,

5:24

we can group the radiation, the biological effect

5:26

of radiation into two categories.

5:29

One is stochastic effect,

5:32

the other one is called non-ST stochastic effect,

5:35

stochastic effect.

5:36

They're also called as delayed effect

5:38

because you don't see this effect immediately.

5:41

And this is more example is cancer in exposed individual

5:45

radiation in ca induced cancers, um,

5:48

because of the radiation exposures.

5:50

And usually these are observed within three to 20 years

5:53

after exposure, or if the fetus is exposed to large quantity

5:58

of radiation, which I'm going to share later of

6:00

what is the quantity I'm talking about in general,

6:04

mutations in offsprings can happen

6:06

or it can impact the pregnancy.

6:08

This is the stochastic effect.

6:09

Stochasticity also implies probabilistic in nature.

6:13

You cannot quantify exactly,

6:16

but the chances, best analogy I can say

6:19

for stochastic effect is buying a lottery ticket.

6:22

When the jackpot increases, people rush to buy more tickets.

6:25

The reason is they want to increase the chances

6:28

of winning the jackpot.

6:30

Similarly, you can look at the radiation doses.

6:33

Exposure of for stochastic effect has

6:35

to be like every exposure will have certain chances,

6:38

but we cannot tell which has this, um,

6:41

which which is exactly we cannot, can, cannot be quantified.

6:46

The second type of, um,

6:47

biological effect is the nons stochastic effect,

6:50

also called this tissue effect also calls acute effect.

6:54

This acute effect occurs

6:56

because of the direct damage to tissue due

6:59

to local cell death

7:00

and usually it's observed within days to weeks.

7:03

And this non-ST stochastic effect, um,

7:06

in imaging we see is a little bit more quantifiable

7:08

with respiratory imaging, uh,

7:10

with respiratory radiation exposure

7:12

because the radiation effort such

7:15

as the deterministic effort only observe when the radiation

7:18

level exceeds certain threshold level.

7:21

Therefore, we can quantify

7:23

or at least expect any

7:24

of this effort if the radiation exposure

7:26

is at a certain level.

7:28

So broadly categorizing any type of radiation exposure,

7:32

there is stochastic effect

7:34

and there is non-ST stochastic effect.

7:37

What is the radiation exposure during pregnancy in order

7:40

to examine this aspect of radiation exposure,

7:43

if we do any imaging during pregnancy, let's examine

7:47

what is the, uh, impact, um, after radiation on pregnancy

7:51

and so forth For that.

7:53

Um, I wanna share

7:54

with you the radiation effects on the unborn

7:57

on this slide here.

7:58

Basically demonstrating the impact on the pregnancy

8:02

matched with respiratory.

8:03

The mouse model, the mouse model, the mice model does shows

8:07

as a very nice way

8:08

of explaining the radiation efforts on the fetuses.

8:12

On your left, on the right left, uh,

8:14

right hand side is shown a graft basically telling like

8:17

what are the chances

8:18

of a certain effect happening depending on the time

8:21

of the trimester or the time

8:23

of the pregnancy being exposed to radiation.

8:27

Again, warning is these numbers are very high numbers,

8:30

which we don't normally see in imaging.

8:33

Therefore, as you can see here, the most sensitive part

8:37

of the prior pregnancy is the first trimester

8:39

between two to 15 weeks.

8:41

And during that time, very large quantity

8:44

of radiation exposure can lead to prenatal

8:47

or embryonic death.

8:48

And that's kind of documented

8:49

with the experiments done on the development mice exposed

8:53

to 200 rats ranking of exposure.

8:56

That's a large quantity of exposure we see in imaging.

8:59

We don't see that level in the imaging.

9:02

So what I'm trying to convey here is like, in addition

9:04

to sharing with you the knowledge about what we know,

9:07

I'm also trying to put that in perspective.

9:09

How does that compare to

9:11

what the radiation doses we use these days in the imaging?

9:15

The other aspect is

9:16

that the pregnancy is a little bit in the second trimester

9:20

and then then there is a radiation exposure.

9:22

The effort we have known is decreasing head size

9:25

and mental retardation and so forth.

9:27

The chances are higher and that is documented in the people

9:32

who survived their Hiroshima Nagasaki bomb bomb

9:35

explosion at that time.

9:37

And, and every radiation exposure

9:39

to the features have some child slight increase

9:41

of the childhood cancer and so forth.

9:43

Having said that,

9:45

what is the level which we are typically

9:47

concerned in imaging?

9:50

So, and,

9:51

and this is again, this is not a strict, uh,

9:54

threshold level, but approximately conservative level is a

9:58

dose to the fetus of a hundred.

10:01

Milli c word during the first six weeks

10:03

of pregnancy is considered as a cutoff point

10:07

above which you can, one can consider

10:09

therapeutic abortion or so forth.

10:12

If I leave that statement right here,

10:14

it can cause further confusion.

10:16

So to put this in perspective, how does that compare

10:19

to the examination we do in the imaging?

10:21

A typical examination example, the CT of the abdomen

10:25

and pelvic, let's say the effective dose of one CT

10:29

and abdominal pelvic is about 10 milli ct.

10:32

These days, we are doing much at a much lower level

10:35

than 10 milli ct.

10:36

But in general, let's say let for easy

10:40

easy understanding 10 milli ct.

10:42

That means in order to reach a hundred milli ct,

10:46

one should get more than 10 CT of the abdomen

10:49

and pelvic during the first six weeks after conception.

10:53

If you look at this aspect, the chances

10:56

of a pregnant patient getting this amount of le level due

11:00

to pregnancy the during pregnancy is almost impossible

11:04

or almost very highly unlikely at the most.

11:08

Sometime the pregnant patient gets the CT

11:10

of the abdomen in pelvic week or

11:12

because of the emergency situation

11:14

or some clinical indicated nerves, the doses are much lower,

11:18

probably about 10 minutes, see what or even lesser.

11:20

So what I want

11:21

to convey here is like even though we know the radiation

11:24

exposures to the, to the pre

11:26

and during pregnancy can cas effect the amount

11:30

of imaging doses we use these days

11:32

or we use in imaging is far less

11:34

of a concern even if we are doing on a pregnant patient.

11:38

I'm gonna continue this particular discussion even further,

11:41

but demonstrating why.

11:43

So, so let's all, um,

11:46

the diagnostic imaging system utilizing radiations are the

11:50

following, following three radiography, fluoroscopy

11:54

and CT ultrasound does not use radiation and so is MRI.

11:58

So let's focus on these three things.

12:00

In order to examine these three things, we also need

12:03

to understand how is the radiation dose

12:05

pattern distribution in the body.

12:07

For that, we need

12:09

to understand what's the typical radiation dose distribution

12:13

in radiography and fluoroscopy

12:15

because the radiation enters the body

12:18

and the radiation comes outta the body, which is captured

12:20

by the detector to create an image,

12:23

the surface dose is always maximum.

12:26

So the, the highest dose is on the surface

12:30

and the dose decreases vertically going down.

12:34

So the rule of thumb, for an average size patient

12:37

to get a good image quality, only about 15%

12:40

of the dose is coming out of the patient,

12:42

which we capture with a detector.

12:44

So for radiography

12:46

and oscopy, the surface dose is very critical

12:49

and that is the maximum

12:51

and goes down as we go through the patient on a ct.

12:55

On the other hand, for the ct, the typical distribution,

12:59

the dose distribution is as follows,

13:01

because we are acquiring the data around the patient,

13:04

the surface dose will become the maximum

13:08

and the center dose will be the minimum

13:10

and that's what we see that

13:13

unifor uniform dose on the surface

13:15

and it decreases radially.

13:17

And for those who read the CT of a large patient,

13:20

you may have seen some time in the abdominal CT at the

13:24

center being lot of this art like lot of, um, study pattern

13:29

because of the photon starvation we call it

13:31

as photon starvation.

13:33

Why this understanding the dose

13:35

distribution is critical for us.

13:36

I'm gonna share with you next why this is important.

13:39

When we are examining what is the radiation exposure

13:43

to the pregnant patient, um, um,

13:45

with use these type of imaging modalities.

13:48

So in order to do that, I want to use a couple

13:51

of two, two different graphs.

13:53

One is when the fetus,

13:56

when when you are doing an imaging procedure, any type

13:59

of imaging x-rays where fluoroscopy r ct, um, this is

14:03

how, this is a typical examination of a chest x-ray.

14:06

Um, for example, the maximum dose is in the, on the entrance

14:10

of the patient in the, in the backside here

14:13

and the minimal dose coming out.

14:15

The dose coming out here is the

14:17

one captured by the detector.

14:19

As the X-rays pass through.

14:21

There is some of it is absorbed, some of it is scattered

14:24

and that scatter will move in all direction

14:27

and that's, we call it as internal scatter.

14:30

And that internal scatter goes down, get absorbed

14:34

and absorbed and absorbed.

14:36

Therefore, if a pregnant patient,

14:38

if you're doing a chest radiograph, um, and

14:41

or any type of ver graft outside the, uh, abdomen

14:45

and pelvic of a pregnant patient, the fetus is not

14:49

directly in the path of the x-ray beam.

14:52

That's the, that is the classification I like to show.

14:55

So here the fetus is not directly in the x-ray beam path,

15:00

therefore very few scatter radiation will reach the fetus

15:05

and the fetal dose can be as small

15:08

as 10 micro seaver.

15:11

What does it c word dose means?

15:13

Seaver is the quantity of the qu, the dose quantity we use

15:17

and micro seaver means 1000 micro seaver equal

15:21

to one milli C word.

15:23

And to put that in perspective, in the US the average

15:27

annual background radiation

15:30

for the everybody on this in the on here in the US

15:33

is about three milli C.

15:35

So if you look at here, any

15:37

of the fetal dose receiving from any

15:40

of these radiograph out, when the fetus is not

15:43

directly in the beam, the dose is very insignificant,

15:47

are almost very, very, very low.

15:50

That's one, one concept.

15:52

The second concept is

15:53

because of that we can say like this, the radiation goes

15:57

to the fetus when it is not in the path

16:01

of the primary x-ray.

16:03

Um, I want to, I want to kind

16:06

of nicely group into two different scenario

16:09

of any x-ray imaging exam when the fetus is not

16:13

directly in the path of the primary beam, we call this

16:17

as it's not in the path of the primary X-ray beam.

16:20

In that case the,

16:22

for diagnostic procedures X-rays procedure, the,

16:26

the fetal dose or internal dose is almost same

16:29

as the background radiation dose about 10 micro.

16:34

If the, if the procedure is a fluoroscopy

16:36

and ct, the dose is even lesser, uh,

16:39

when the fetus is not directly in the beam

16:41

because the c the the CT use small, small slices,

16:46

so therefore the intra scatter is even much lesser.

16:49

Therefore for fluoroscopy in ct,

16:52

the general understanding is the fetal dose is

16:54

approximately less than five micro.

16:57

To put this in perspective,

16:58

the average annual background

17:00

radiation is about three milli.

17:03

So the take home is if the fetus is not directly in the path

17:08

of the primary X-ray beam, either in x-rays, radiography,

17:13

fluoroscopy, or in ct,

17:15

the the radiation exposure fetus is almost very

17:19

insignificant or very small

17:22

or ins very insignificant is equal to almost equal

17:25

to the natural background radiation dose.

17:28

So now let's look at the exam in the situation where the,

17:32

the, the fetus is in direct path of the beam.

17:35

That happens if you're doing an abdominal radiograph,

17:38

abdominal fluoroscopy or abdominal ct.

17:42

When the abdominal radiograph,

17:44

I'm showing you an example here, the

17:47

for the abdominal radiograph and the con

17:49

and uh, during that time the fetus radiation is as follows.

17:54

Again, it depends on the way the fetus is located.

17:58

For radiograph, the surface dose is the maximum and

18:02

therefore the dose will decrease as it going through.

18:06

So depending on the location of the fetus,

18:09

the radiation dose can be quite small or go goes down.

18:13

Therefore, the fetus, when the fetus is directly in the path

18:17

of the X-ray beam, the x-ray intensity can reach,

18:21

can usually less than 50% of ward that is entering.

18:26

So what the pregnant patient is getting on the surface,

18:30

the fetus is receiving half of that to

18:33

and approximately the fetus dose may be

18:36

as much as 10 milligram.

18:38

Even that number when I'm sure other tables will then

18:41

demonstrate how smaller this relatively smaller compared to

18:45

what we are typically concerned

18:47

about the radiation exposure.

18:50

So this one is at the,

18:52

when the fetus is directly in the path of the beam,

18:55

it is exposed to, um, radiation,

18:58

but that radiation to the fetus depending on the location

19:01

of the fetus and as the abdominal radiograph shows here,

19:06

the surface dose is the maximum,

19:08

the fetus doses can be almost half of

19:10

what the surface dose is.

19:13

Now what are the fetal efforts from low level

19:16

of radiation exposure?

19:18

So as I say, here's a table is a busy table.

19:22

I'm not going to read through the table

19:24

or expect you to know,

19:25

but I wanna highlight some of a couple of things

19:28

in the earlier chart I showed, um, on, on the mouse model,

19:32

the very large quantity of exposure

19:35

during the first trimester can cause spontaneous abortion

19:38

or embryonic death in order to occur

19:41

that the dose level needed is more than 200 milligram.

19:45

So we have seen that in atomic bomb survivor

19:49

who received more than 200 milligram had some type

19:53

of effect congenital formation

19:55

that is in the second trimester.

19:57

But what we know is like the most sensitive part

20:01

of the pregnancy, we do not have any data for human studies

20:06

and especially absolute incident studies.

20:09

Therefore, if the concept survive, it is thought

20:12

to develop fully with no radiation damage

20:14

or any radiation exposure if it is occur,

20:18

if the radiation exposure is in the second trimester,

20:20

let's say abdominal radiograph CT

20:22

or any of these things, animal studies have shown

20:26

if the fetus has visited more than 50 to a hundred

20:29

or 250 gra of dose, that's when um, and,

20:33

and human studies has shown,

20:35

especially from the atomic bomb survivor,

20:37

if it is more than 200 gra it is shown to have some type

20:41

of a, um, congenital mal formation

20:44

or a smaller head circums and so forth.

20:47

But I also show shared earlier

20:50

that if the fetus is directly in the path of the beam

20:53

for abdominal radiograph, the fetus exposure can be as low

20:56

as 10 milligram.

20:58

Put that in perspective to 250 milligram.

21:01

We don't have much evidence on the data to be of

21:04

of which demonstrate any type of a risk with respect

21:08

to the fetus and even when it is directly exposed

21:11

to the radiation in the abdominal radiograph and so forth.

21:14

This table is basically demonstrating some of the dose level

21:18

and amount of D data we have and what it can imply.

21:23

But if to draw your attention, all of them

21:26

is the radiation doses is in the order of a hundred

21:30

or 200 milli K

21:32

or milli milli K of levels,

21:34

which we normally don't see in a single radiograph

21:37

or a single uh ct.

21:40

So to put it in another perspective,

21:44

the potential radiation effect on the fetus

21:47

by gestational age

21:49

and radiation exposure is can be discussed here in this fall

21:53

following if the, during the gestation age between zero

21:57

to two weeks or three to four weeks, the potential effect

22:01

by radiation exposure, if it is less than 50 milligram

22:06

we have it is demonstrated there's no effect on the,

22:09

on the, on the fetus.

22:12

If it is only more than a hundred milligram,

22:15

that's when there is some understanding that can lead

22:18

to some type of spontaneous abortion

22:21

possible deficient in IQ or mental reation and so forth.

22:25

And this basically demonstrate during the pregnancy

22:28

if the dose is anytime during the first trimester

22:31

or the second or the trim trimester, if the patient gets,

22:35

um, if the fetus is dose is less than 150 milligram,

22:39

we don't have any evidence to show any risk

22:42

to the radiation exposure

22:44

and that's the take home message I want to convey.

22:47

So 50 milligram

22:48

or even a hundred milligram below a hundred milligram,

22:51

we don't have any evidence with respect

22:53

to the radiation effect on the, on the fetus.

22:58

So any imaging of the pregnant patient as long

23:02

as is clinically relevant, can be done safely

23:06

and we don't have to deny the pregnant patient from the

23:09

valuable information one gets from doing an imaging.

23:13

One way, the other way to look at it,

23:15

we can also communicate the risk, um,

23:18

who requires x-ray imaging when we counsel pregnant patient

23:22

about this x-ray imaging,

23:23

we can look at this in a different way also.

23:26

One is every pregnancy carries some risk even with no,

23:31

um, no mal formation

23:33

or even with a zero zero dose means no exposure.

23:37

The the probability of at birth with no mal formation

23:41

or no childhood cancer is about 96% or 99.93%.

23:46

In total, about 96% means every pregnancy have about four 4%

23:51

chance of mal formation of childhood cancer.

23:54

Now on top of it,

23:55

if you have any fetal doses receiving about five,

23:59

let's say 10 mg,

24:01

they individual risk will only go from 95.95

24:06

to 95.83.

24:08

So as you can demonstrate, shown here is

24:10

that the risk from imaging pregnant patient

24:15

is quite small compared

24:16

to all the other risk involved in the pregnancy.

24:19

So therefore, pregnant patient can be imaged safely as long

24:24

as it's clinically relevant and needed.

24:28

The recommendation from the American College of Obby

24:31

and gynecology and the a CR on the use

24:35

of CT is demonstr listed here, according

24:38

to the American College of Obstetric

24:40

and Gynecology, um,

24:42

they recommend is perform necessary examination only

24:46

after clinical workup and it,

24:50

and they also recommend counsel for radiation exposure.

24:53

And the reason is like you can, uh,

24:55

you can automatically try to answer any concern

24:58

to the patient because the patient

25:00

or the general public get a lot

25:02

of misinformation about radiation.

25:04

Therefore, they recommend any type of imaging done

25:07

during pregnancy to have some type

25:09

of a counseling for radiation exposure.

25:11

They also state that iodinated contrast agent is safe is is

25:15

considered safe during pregnancy.

25:17

The American College of Radiology recommendation is keep the

25:21

radiation low levels as low as reasonably achievable

25:25

and that is possible by following multiple ways

25:28

of dose optimization technique,

25:30

which I'm gonna discuss later, um, which can be done

25:33

with the work of a team of radiologists, medical physicist

25:37

and technologist den contrast material is also likely to,

25:41

is safe in pregnancy

25:43

and a CR also recommend for any type of a counsel

25:46

for addition exposure, allowing an opportunity

25:48

to answer any likely question the patient might have.

25:54

So now let's say, let's examine here is a data

25:57

for various fetal dose from imaging procedure.

26:01

Yeah, as I as you shown here is like radiography

26:04

and fluoroscopy exposure, CT and nuclear medicine procedure.

26:09

If you look at the radiography

26:10

and fluoroscopy exposure, the typical fetal dose,

26:14

even from the double contrast variant anima study,

26:17

which includes a lot of radiograph

26:19

around the abdominal region,

26:20

even there the typical fetus dose is about seven milligram.

26:24

To put that in perspective, we have data of any, um,

26:29

now on any risk only when the doses is about 250 milligram

26:34

or even symptom more than a hundred milli grade.

26:36

So suffice to say that any radiograph

26:40

and fluoroscopy procedures can be done safely on pregnant

26:44

patient as long as the clinical indication is very critical

26:49

and benefits, uh, for outweigh any of the risk.

26:53

When you look and examine the nuclear medicine procedure,

26:56

the typical fetal dose, uh, is about the, the,

27:00

the largest dose is about when you do the whole body pet PET

27:04

imaging studies about 15 milligram even

27:07

that is lower than the 50 milligram,

27:09

which demonstrate there is no possible effects on the

27:13

pregnancy in ct.

27:15

If you look examine any exam,

27:17

it does not include fetus directly in the path of the beam.

27:21

The radiation dose to the fetus is very, very small

27:24

or almost insignificant,

27:27

but those exams would include directly in the path

27:30

of the beam such as abdominal or abdominal pelvic

27:34

or routine pelvic uh, CT exams that can go as much

27:38

as 25 milligram,

27:39

but there are a number of steps one can take

27:41

to minimize this radiation exposure even further.

27:48

So before I move into radiation exposure to the uh,

27:50

the pediatric patient, I wanna uh,

27:52

take a couple of take home message.

27:54

One is as long, if the fetus is not directly in the path

27:59

of the radia path of the primary beam of x-ray fluoroscopy

28:02

or CT one should um,

28:05

understand any radiation exporter features is very small,

28:09

almost same level as the NAB background radiation

28:12

and that's caused due to some internal radiation scatter,

28:15

not any external radiation scatter.

28:18

That's also one

28:19

of the reason why we don't recommend putting any apron on

28:23

the patient, even when you're doing the pregnant patient

28:26

for any of the radiograph

28:27

because that's only gives only psychological comfort

28:31

but not any additional protection from any internal

28:34

scatter take on.

28:36

Two, if the radiation exposure involves the fetus directly

28:40

in the path of the primary beam, then there is some exposure

28:44

to the fetus and that depends on the depth of the fetus

28:48

and as a medical physicist can do a fetal dose exposure

28:52

or estimation taking into a variety of parameters which,

28:57

um, uh, which are taken into consideration

29:00

for estimating the fetus dose.

29:02

In my experience of all these 30 years, I have never, um,

29:06

encountered a situation

29:08

where the fetus exposure was more than uh, um, reached even

29:13

to 50 milligram of exposure.

29:16

Most of the cases when the pregnant patient are scanned is

29:19

in the emergency room when they are either brought

29:21

as a trauma patient or are they come in the middle

29:24

of the night for lower abdominal pain where they can,

29:27

they are immediately gut a CT scan

29:30

and the medical physicist as such as mine,

29:32

we can calculate the fetal dose estimation

29:35

and most of the time is much less than 25 milli grade.

29:39

Therefore, it is suffice to say that

29:42

even though people are totally worried about radiation

29:45

and not to and about radiation exposure during pregnancy,

29:49

it can be imaging can be done very safely during pregnancy,

29:53

especially those which, um,

29:56

and so we need to evaluate the risk versus the benefit

30:00

ratio, the, the benefit for outweigh any

30:03

of the risk associated with radiation exposure.

30:06

Now with respect to radiation exposure in pediatric patient,

30:10

I'm going to focus on few things

30:12

because of the time limitation

30:14

and we are gonna take lot more questions to answer any

30:17

of your questions you have.

30:18

First of all, why children are more vulnerable

30:22

to radiation than adults.

30:24

Of course we all know that um, for the same amount

30:26

of radiation exposure,

30:28

the the chi children will have larger effect dose means

30:32

higher risk compared to adult effect dose

30:35

because the anger bodies are more sensitive to radiation,

30:39

they are longer lifetime for radiation efforts to, to impart

30:43

that is the stochastic effect to show up

30:45

and for the same technique,

30:47

kids will observe more radiation than others

30:50

in because of this.

30:51

We have a general understanding on this particular graph

30:55

shown, um, as the um, attributable lifetime risk,

31:00

which is what um, cancer epidemiologists use

31:03

to estimate radiation risk shown on this one is attributable

31:08

lifetime risk per perceived dose over the period of aging.

31:12

And generally for epidemiological risk estimation we use

31:17

a model called 5% perceived for males

31:21

and females are slightly risk

31:23

and that is estimated pretty much same across the age,

31:26

but in reality children are two

31:29

to three times at a higher risk than the adults

31:32

because they're living for a longer time,

31:34

their bodies are developing and so forth.

31:36

So one has to make sure we take special precaution when we

31:40

are doing imaging of the prep, uh, of the pediatric patient

31:43

and that's why from past 20 years we are seeing lot more

31:47

development, um, towards developing protocols specifically

31:52

for pediatric patient both in CT in fluoroscopy

31:56

and in radiography.

31:57

To put this in perspective, the natural incident

32:01

of fatal cancer in the US is about 25%.

32:05

In fact, some of these uh, uh,

32:06

studies even caught even higher than that.

32:09

Therefore, if somebody get a CT

32:12

or an radio X-ray examination

32:14

of 10 milli say their individual lifetime risk is only

32:18

increased by 0.4% compared

32:21

to the natural incident of fatal cancer.

32:23

So what I meant to say is like as long as the studies

32:27

is providing clinical value, the radiation exposure,

32:33

what the pregnant patient

32:34

or to the pediatric patient, um, is,

32:37

the risks are much smaller

32:39

and that risk can further mitigate by adopting number

32:42

of optimization principle.

32:44

So where are we in the US approximately?

32:46

This is one of the data which I have we to show the number

32:50

of CT we use we do in the us.

32:53

Among all the number of CT done in the US in 2016,

32:56

approximately 82 million CT procedure, 10% of

33:00

that was on pediatric.

33:01

And if you look in among the pediatric, we did uh,

33:05

dwell more deeply into radiation exposure

33:07

to the US population from medical exposure.

33:10

This was published in this NCRP and 180 4 report.

33:14

We look in among the 10, uh, among the pediatric population,

33:18

majority of the doses come from CT because,

33:21

and the rest of it, the other procedures are fluoroscopy,

33:25

interventional and nuclear medicine.

33:27

Among the ct, majority of that comes from head CT

33:30

because among the CT procedure done, majority

33:33

of the pediatric uh, x-ray imaging or CT done is in the head

33:38

and the abdomen pelvic can contribute this amount of dose.

33:41

What I'm trying to convey here is like the the,

33:45

if we are trying to optimize a protocol,

33:48

examining the CT protocol specifically should be designed

33:51

for pediatric patient.

33:53

And what can be done in that one is we need to make sure

33:57

that the imaging provides a clear benefit

34:00

and that is the bottom line for any imaging.

34:03

The risk the benefit should fall outweigh the risk.

34:07

In addition for a pediatric patient these days

34:10

with the technology advanced, we have to use what is called

34:14

as a dose modulation.

34:15

In ct all the advanced CT scanner we are using these days

34:20

above 16 slice multi detector ct.

34:22

The radiation dose modulation technique have matured.

34:26

So adapting the dose modulation technique will

34:30

minimize radiation exporter patient

34:32

because the scanner will automatically lower the dose

34:36

or change the dose based on the patient thickness.

34:39

So one doesn't have to have to kind of like gauge

34:43

and adjust the technique.

34:44

The mission will do it for yourself.

34:47

They change the technique based on the patient thickness.

34:51

In addition, the pediatric patients typically can be done at

34:55

a lower tube voltage within ct.

34:58

There is no longer needed

35:00

to acquire all cts in the same tube voltage, which was what

35:04

majority of the places did 20 years ago.

35:06

But now with a lot of understanding

35:08

and knowledge we have lowering using low tube voltage

35:12

a hundred kv 82 voltage

35:15

and 70 kilo voltage automatically have even further

35:19

reduction in the radiation dose.

35:21

Adapting these things, the dose modulation

35:24

and the use of low tube voltage, the radiation dose given

35:27

to the pediatric patient in CT has significantly dropped

35:32

from past 15, 20 years

35:34

and this needs to be done to undo

35:36

for while you're imaging the p pediatric patient.

35:39

The other aspect which is very important for uh,

35:42

imaging in either child

35:44

or in pregnant is to limit the area of imaging area.

35:48

One doesn't have to um, expose region, which is not needed

35:52

for diagnostic studies.

35:54

For example, for the chest ct, it doesn't have

35:57

to cover the entire head and neck or the abdomen.

36:00

It has to be limited to the area of diagnosis required.

36:06

The second is we want

36:07

to make sure the study is done on the pediatric is done the

36:10

right way the very first time,

36:12

therefore we minimize multiple scan.

36:16

That's also one of the reason why we are now advocating not

36:21

to not to use any type of a shielding on pediatric patient

36:24

or any patient because those shields can inert inadvertently

36:28

results in repeating the studies.

36:31

If, if it has to be avoided, one can always examine using,

36:35

doing the study, using ultrasound or MRI.

36:38

So why is CT done most commonly in pediatric patient?

36:42

And there are for a number of reason.

36:44

One is it is quick

36:45

and fast, it can be done in less than the time required

36:49

to put the patient on the table

36:52

and that is a major advantage.

36:54

Second is you can minimize the motion, motion artifact by

36:57

because of the fast scanning in the ct,

37:00

the scans can be done less than one second.

37:04

We have now advanced CT scanners such

37:06

as the three 20 detector scanner,

37:08

which covers an area about 16 centimeter,

37:11

which means small babies,

37:13

the entire chest CT can be done in half of the rotation

37:16

or one rotation, which is about 0.3.

37:18

Second, we can also get very high quality images.

37:22

We can because of the fast scanning

37:24

and the larger area, we can minimize the use of contrast.

37:29

Seldom we use sedation.

37:31

So one of the argument which I have with some

37:33

of my colleagues is like in order to avoid radiation,

37:36

they try to redo it on on MRI.

37:39

So my call quality is, my argument is one should not avoid

37:44

or hesitate to use CT

37:47

or radiation of course just for radiation's sake

37:50

and perform MRI because MRI has its own has its own issues.

37:55

So what I'm trying to convey is like

37:59

avoiding CT in pediatric patient or pregnant patient

38:02

because of radiation, um,

38:05

and moving them away to just to MRI

38:08

or other studies just to, our radiation has

38:10

to be examined more closely because there are other issue.

38:14

For example in MRI we have the scan time is a big issue.

38:19

It can take a long time.

38:21

In order to address this,

38:22

we in the past we wrote this paper called

38:25

if MRI examination time is considered equivalent

38:30

to X-ray dose in CT

38:32

and put the limitation on the exam time.

38:36

One can result in creating LA shorter MR studies

38:40

in a shorter time and it can become less expensive

38:44

and more studies and more patients can be

38:46

accommodated to MRI.

38:47

Again, this is a just a, um, just a, um, one

38:51

of the points which I wanted to make,

38:53

but in general there are a number of resources available

38:58

for, uh, what one has to do for imaging.

39:01

Um, so social media campaign like an image gently

39:05

has a valuable resources available, um,

39:08

which basically the aim is to increase awareness for need

39:12

to decrease radiation dose to children

39:14

and adults with a medical imaging.

39:17

And we have seen this image gently

39:19

campaign similar thing has been mimicking

39:21

now across the globe.

39:23

Um, in Europe we have eurosafe in, uh,

39:26

in South America we have Latin safe.

39:28

Um, in Asia we have Asia safe, which all have the same uh,

39:33

uh, objective is to bring awareness.

39:36

There is a need to examine imaging protocol

39:39

to minimize the risk from radiation

39:42

and uh, MR safety and so forth.

39:44

There is also, similarly, there is image wisely.

39:47

And um, for those who are doing,

39:49

have questions about radiation have uh,

39:52

are question about a procedure one can also check out this

39:56

radiology info.org, which is dialed between radiologist

40:00

and medical physicist housed by RSNA

40:02

and a CR has a very valuable website which is geared towards

40:06

answering these questions to the patients

40:09

and so anybody can understand, get a lot

40:11

of valuable information from these websites.

40:15

Before I conclude the lecture, I also want to show some

40:18

of the policy statement regarding imaging pregnant patient.

40:22

One of the policy statement is from this NCRP,

40:25

the National Council

40:26

of Radiation Protection and Measurement.

40:28

This is a advisory body to the US government.

40:32

NCRP put out various reports on radiation exposure

40:35

to the paper, the to to the patients

40:38

or PO to the population according to the NCRP,

40:41

they do may have the statement telling like

40:44

risk is considered to be negligible at 50 milligram

40:47

or less when compared to other risk of pregnancy

40:51

and risk of mal formation is significantly increases

40:55

only when radiation doses the fetus is above 150 milligram.

40:59

And they also says like exposure of fetus to radiation

41:03

arising from radio diagnostic procedure

41:06

would very rarely be the cause by itself

41:09

for terminating pregnant.

41:10

Because there is a tendency sometime when when patients get

41:14

imaging done and they're pregnant, there is like, they're

41:17

so much worried they try to looking

41:19

for all these other option to terminate a pregnancy,

41:23

worrying about the radiation exposure.

41:25

In that regard, they need to understand these policy,

41:27

this knowledge we have about this, uh, imaging during,

41:31

during the pregnant patient.

41:33

Similarly, the ICRP,

41:35

the International Body on radiation protection,

41:38

they also have a statement telling like

41:40

prenatal doses from most properly done

41:43

diagnostic procedures present no measurable

41:46

or increased risk of, of fatal cancer, of prenatal death

41:51

or more formation or other entities.

41:54

Fetal doses below a hundred milligram should not be

41:58

considered a reason for terminating a pregnancy.

42:00

And that is important statements

42:02

to be understood when we are examining

42:05

or worried about imaging pregnant patient.

42:07

Are a pregnant patient getting an imaging done

42:10

again, tore, confirm again.

42:12

Uh, American College of Obstruct

42:14

and gynecologist made the all appalling statement.

42:17

Similarly, a CR has similar statement telling like

42:20

interruption of pregnancies rarely justified

42:23

because of the radiation risk to the embryo

42:25

or fetus from a radiological examination.

42:30

The reiterating the American College

42:32

of OB gynecology statement on regarding MRI again,

42:35

they say there are no no there are no known biological

42:39

effect of MRI and fetus.

42:41

So MRI in pregnant patient can be done safely except

42:45

that the gadolinium should not be,

42:47

should be awarded when examining the pregnant patient.

42:51

The American College of Radiology also has a lot

42:53

of practice parameters for variety of, uh,

42:56

topics in the field.

42:58

One of them is this, uh, um,

43:00

the joint statement from the American College of Radiology

43:03

and the Society of Pediatric, uh, radiology

43:06

practice parameter for the safe use of optimal, um,

43:10

optimal performance of fetal MRI has the following.

43:14

The present data have not conclusively documented

43:18

any deleterious effect on MRI at 1.5

43:22

and three T test on the developing fetus.

43:25

So this statement confines to 1.5 to three Tesla

43:28

and lower than that one.

43:30

Therefore, they also make a statement

43:31

that there is no special consideration is recommended

43:35

for any trimester in pregnancy.

43:38

And they also tell like pregnant patients can be accepted

43:41

to undergo MS scanner at any stage

43:43

of the pregnancy if the risk to benefit ratio warrants

43:47

that the study be performed.

43:50

They also warrants about the other things,

43:53

the theoretical consideration

43:54

for the radiofrequency power consideration

43:57

and the gradient used in the study

44:00

regarding the specific absorption ratio

44:03

that needs to be evaluated.

44:05

So the key points during x-ray imaging of pregnant patient

44:09

benefit of medical x-ray imaging procedure should be weighed

44:14

as part of the risk assessment

44:16

and counseling the patient who are found to be pregnant

44:19

and is radiation counseling.

44:21

When the fetus is outside the primary path,

44:25

the radiation dose to the fetus is generally negligible

44:28

and that's because of the internal scatter.

44:30

It's going to vary less, almost same

44:32

as the natural bigger daily background radiation dose level.

44:36

When the fetus is in the path,

44:39

one can take optimal techniques

44:41

to minimize the radiation exposure to patient

44:44

and that can be a lecture by itself.

44:46

Uh, in future, in conclusion,

44:50

imaging pregnant patient,

44:52

if the fetus is not in the X-ray beam

44:56

exposure is minimal or negligible.

44:58

If it's in the path of the X-ray beam, those can be lowered

45:03

by dose optimization strategies.

45:05

Imaging pregnant patient one needs

45:08

to use the optimization strategies

45:10

to minimize radiation exposure.

45:13

In conclusion, imaging including CT should not be avoided

45:18

because the patient is pregnant

45:20

or pediatric when the procedure is clinically appropriate.

45:24

Let me stop here and I will take any questions. Thank you.

45:30

Thank you so much for that lecture Dr.

45:32

Mahesh, we do have a couple questions, so I will

45:36

read those to you now.

45:38

Should I stop sharing the screen?

45:41

Sure. Okay, awesome.

45:44

What, what is the MSV dose

45:46

for the whole body X-ray like skeletal survey?

45:51

So, um, it's interesting question.

45:53

Skeletal survey, um, includes different part of the body,

45:58

um, and depends on the technique.

46:00

Again, if you're doing in a pediatric patient,

46:03

it can be different adult, it can be different.

46:05

So it is not, it's, there's no one number to tell you,

46:09

but the radiograph with the digital radiography technique we

46:13

are using these days, the dose are getting quite smaller,

46:16

but I don't have one number to say

46:19

what is the Millie word from skeletal x-ray,

46:20

because that can be a false number

46:23

and it can vary from patient size and what are the,

46:26

and the patient, uh, age also.

46:31

Great. What is the best way to put the lead apron

46:36

when we do CT chest

46:37

for non-pregnant patient including pediatric?

46:41

I mean we should put the apron interior

46:43

or wrap it around the pelvis like skirt.

46:46

Okay, two things.

46:47

First of all, um, the American College American,

46:50

a association physicist in medicine

46:52

and now even the NCRP have come against the use of any type

46:55

of lead apron during any type of imaging.

46:58

First we made a statement for gonadal imaging.

47:01

There is no need for shielding during gonadal,

47:04

especially for a couple of reason.

47:06

One is it can be misplaced

47:08

and even if it is correctly placed,

47:10

it can obscure the needed area for diagnostic.

47:13

Third is use of the digital radiography technique

47:17

with the shield in the path

47:18

of the beam can actually increase the dose to the patient

47:21

because the system will automatically think the patient is

47:25

thick, it increase the dose.

47:27

So there is no lead la there is no lead

47:29

apron required for imaging.

47:31

The other other point is like, let's say for the ct, um, lot

47:35

of the time you only you give this apron was

47:39

for psychological comfort.

47:41

And if you're doing that, if you're ct, you have

47:44

to really wrap the patient, which again becomes impossible

47:47

and becomes very futile attempt.

47:49

Let's say for example, a pregnant patient comes

47:51

for a CT chest CT and she's getting a chest ct.

47:55

And typically by practice, by conventional practice

48:00

or uh, legacy practice, we have apron rapid it on the,

48:04

on the pra, on the on the belly, assuming that

48:08

that apron is protecting the uh, uh, fetus,

48:11

not necessarily it can give you false comfort

48:14

and also it can come in the path of the beam.

48:17

In those situations, make sure

48:19

that you're not unnecessarily radiating the abdominal area

48:22

limit the area, uh, area.

48:24

So the use of apron is almost becoming, um, which almost,

48:29

um, being made around the world not to be used

48:33

during the imaging purpose.

48:34

In fact, when a PM

48:36

and a CR, we came up with a statement, um,

48:39

about the gonadal dose.

48:40

NCRP has now have a study,

48:42

have a statement telling there's no need for use of apron.

48:46

Similarly, the UK Radiology Society also commences against

48:49

the use of this lead apron.

48:51

And recently you, many

48:53

of you may know the American Dental Society has come out

48:58

with the study telling that use of lead apron even

49:01

during the left, um, when you visit the dentist is of no use

49:06

and it can be discontinued.

49:11

That was great. Okay, why is it safe

49:16

to use iodine but no gadolinium in pregnant patients?

49:19

So the iodine studies in ct, um,

49:22

has been studied exhaustively

49:24

and found to have no, uh, no effect on patient.

49:28

On the other hand, for the gadolinium, it had the,

49:31

some studies has shown there is a transformation

49:33

of this gadolinium through the placenta

49:35

that can impact the pregnant patient.

49:37

And that's why they're, they're, they're considered a non,

49:40

uh, non, uh, they recommend not to use a contrast in MRI

49:45

because galium is the only contrast used in MRI.

49:51

Great. About

49:52

how many c TPAs can a first trimester mother have?

49:55

What's the dose estimate versus safety?

49:58

So let's say I, I just give a ballpark figure CT

50:01

of the abdomen and wig.

50:03

Let's say it's 10 milli C word.

50:05

These days with the advanced techno technique we have, we,

50:08

we are getting even lower than that.

50:10

Let's, for easy convenience,

50:12

let's say it is 10 milli C word,

50:14

unless the patient, a pregnant patient gets 10 CT

50:19

of the abdomen wig, that's when one can see

50:22

that dose can go up to a hundred.

50:27

Unless you have like 10 ct, you have to be worried.

50:31

And seldom is the case a pregnant patient gets 10 CT

50:35

or even one CT or two or three cts during pregnancy.

50:42

Got it. In breastfeeding women,

50:45

does gadolinium have an effect on milk?

50:46

Is it safe to breastfeed the baby immediately

50:48

after the MRI exam?

50:51

Um, I am going to defer this question for the,

50:55

my colleagues were more expert in MRI, um, but

50:59

however, the pre during pregnancy, the gadolinium is not,

51:03

is, uh, is used as a is not, is counter contraindicated

51:08

and that's one of the reason why they recommend not to use,

51:11

uh, contrast during pregnancy.

51:14

Got it. Okay. We have a specific question here.

51:17

Which protocol does your institution use

51:18

to image a pregnant patient

51:20

with suspected pulmonary embolism?

51:22

What do you I'm not sure

51:25

how I can tell very specific protocol

51:27

because we have a number of protocol actually for a ct.

51:31

I would recommend you to visit hopkins cts as.com.

51:34

My colleague Elliot Fishman has had a website which he,

51:39

we shares the protocols, uh, for a variety of more, uh, uh,

51:45

uh, indications and you can, I would recommend you guys

51:48

to visit that website to look at

51:50

what particular protocol we use

51:52

and in, in any of these things.

51:54

One thing I can make a general, as a physicist

51:57

with the advanced technology we have with the ct,

52:00

we are advising every protocol to use

52:04

as thinnest detector slice as possible so

52:07

that you can acquire the data as the thinnest slices

52:10

and you can always reconstruct it to thick slices.

52:13

But if you acquire the data, the thick slices,

52:16

thick detector, you cannot reconstruct into thin slices.

52:20

So that is the, um, uh, the rule of thumb, I can use it,

52:23

but for a specific protocol our institution uses,

52:27

I would recommend you to check out our c.com

52:29

where my colleague Elliot Fishman has shared many

52:32

of the protocol he has been using

52:34

in routinely in the clinic.

52:37

Great. Okay. Let me see.

52:43

What is the dose reduction technique in a pediatric

52:46

patient and CT scan?

52:47

Which parameter is measuring DLP or CDI volume

52:51

or other parameter?

52:52

Okay, here is a, uh, the couple of things.

52:56

First of all, whatever the dose information we have in the

52:59

ct, it's all based on the phantom measurement.

53:02

We are measured, so it's a, there is,

53:03

we don't directly measure on the patient.

53:05

It is estimated on the patient based

53:07

on the phantom measurement.

53:09

So in general, in order to estimate a long-term risk DLPs,

53:13

the cons, the measure, we wanted those length product

53:17

because, because that will demonstrate

53:19

what is the anatomical area was scanned actually.

53:23

However, right now the two main dose descriptors we used in

53:27

CT is the CTDI wall and DLP.

53:30

Both of them are required to be displayed for each patient.

53:34

So you can actually take a look at these

53:36

numbers under each patient.

53:38

For example, any radiologist reading,

53:40

reading a radio ct, uh, studies.

53:42

If you go back to the last image,

53:44

there is a CT dose image basically showing an A abbreviated

53:49

information on the CTDI volume and the DLP.

53:52

So you can use this DLP information

53:55

and there are some conversion factors to create

53:58

that into an effect dose.

54:00

And those effect dose, you can then examine

54:03

what is the level is and there are conversion factors.

54:06

Um, one set of conversion factor for the adult size

54:10

and there are a little bit more different conversion

54:12

factor for the pediatric.

54:13

And again, there are a variety of sources.

54:15

One, one source, which I would highly recommend is the

54:18

American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

54:21

We have task group reports

54:23

and one of the report task group report 96 clearly have a

54:28

table of this conversion factor for pediatric patient

54:31

compared to the other patient to be used

54:34

to estimate the effect you dose

54:36

for based on the DLPI would highly recommend you

54:39

to take a look at that one because

54:40

they're also freely available.

54:43

Awesome. All right, one more question

54:45

and it's out of my own curiosity.

54:47

In your experience, when has,

54:49

when has it been absolutely necessary

54:51

to image pregnant women?

54:53

Best example is one is trauma case that is different.

54:56

TRA trauma case is, uh, patient brings in, they want

54:59

to save the patient, they wanna, the second most common

55:02

thing done in the pregnant patient is um, uh,

55:05

lower abdominal pain.

55:07

Let's say a second trimester.

55:09

The patient, um, is uh, fully pregnant

55:11

and she experienced lower abdominal uh, pain

55:14

and they come to the emergency room

55:16

and in the middle of the night,

55:18

the best way is like ideally speaking you

55:20

to get an ultrasound.

55:22

If not get an MRI, if not a CT ultrasound.

55:25

A lot of the time we don't have a tech in the middle

55:27

of the night, so it's not possible.

55:28

Second thing is like you want do, do you want

55:30

to go into an MR MRI or a CT MRI can do

55:33

but it'll take 45 minutes.

55:35

The doctor wants the answer in the next minute

55:38

to award any type of abdominal appendicitis rupture so

55:42

that they can go for surgery.

55:43

In those cases, the best answer is get a CT done.

55:47

And that's why most of the hospital now have a CT scanner in

55:51

the emergency room so

55:52

that they can get a quick CT scan of the pregnant patient.

55:55

And that usually takes about less than two seconds

55:58

or three seconds at the most.

56:00

Now you have an answer right off the bat whether the uppers

56:03

is, the lower abdominal pain is caused

56:05

by the ruptured appendicitis.

56:07

If that is the case, they

56:08

can immediately rush to the surgery.

56:09

And I find that that scenario to be the most, um,

56:14

effective scenario using a CT

56:16

because you are getting the answer in a second

56:19

and you can rule out the patient to get either get a,

56:22

a surgery or not.

56:23

And in that cases that becomes really important

56:26

and a lot of the time physicists, we get a call next day

56:28

to like, hey, the patient was scanned, tell you,

56:31

can you tell the estimation when we estimate the fetal dose

56:34

estimation, I have never seen doses more than 10 milligram

56:37

or 20 milligram to the fetus.

56:39

And a lot of the time I have volunteered to consult

56:42

with the patient to explain what that means and why he

56:46

or she, she should, he

56:47

or her, her family should not be worried

56:49

from the radiation exposure.

56:50

Rather they should be keeping their focus on their whole

56:54

pregnancy and other issues.

56:58

Amazing. Thank you so much. Yeah.

57:00

Um, and one more question, uh, the recommended CT website

57:03

that you just threw out, what was the name of that?

57:06

So this is the website.

57:07

My, my colleague, um, has, uh, has it, it's called CT is us.

57:13

So CT IS us.com.

57:15

It is a freely available website, uh, which has lot

57:20

of information and in fact in that, in that, in

57:23

that website, I also have a 16 lecture short lecture on

57:28

CT physi CT physics, CT physics, um, on various topic.

57:33

And it's not a self advertisement,

57:34

but if you're interested you can always take check it out.

57:37

It's about, it's not more than 15 minutes each.

57:41

So you can understand more more about the CT physics.

57:44

But my under my, my take home message

57:46

to the audience here is like there is lot

57:49

of misunderstanding about radiation

57:51

and lot of the time we completely block

57:54

of using CT on pregnant patient

57:57

or pediatric patient for unnecessary reason,

58:00

even when the value is very highly valuable.

58:03

So in that aspect I hope to, I hope I conveyed the message.

58:08

What is about imaging pregnant patient?

58:11

What is about imaging pregnant pediatric patient either

58:14

with MRI or with CT or x-ray?

58:16

That's what, um, I wanted to uh, um, answer some

58:21

of these unanswered these uh, questions which are difficult

58:25

and it can lot of confusion are there in the field

58:28

and only by um, sharing this information we are trying

58:32

to reduce some of this concern.

58:34

Well, I think you did that,

58:36

you definitely illuminated a lot of information for,

58:38

for me and for the audience.

58:39

So thank you so much for being here

58:41

and for doing a, a talk on such an important

58:43

and, and tricky topics.

58:44

Really appreciate it.

58:47

Um, there's one more question.

58:49

Should I take it for this, uh,

58:50

from one of the person for flu?

58:52

Yeah. So The question here is like Flo fluoro exam,

58:56

do you report time imaging numbers

58:58

are, this is a good question.

59:01

So in historically when you say about fluoroscopy procedure,

59:05

any hospital, they always document just the

59:07

Fluor fluoroscopy minutes.

59:09

And in the, in the past that was fine because in fluoroscopy

59:13

or interven fluoroscopy

59:15

or interventional cardiology fluoroscopy procedure,

59:18

we were only, were focused on the fluoroscopy minutes.

59:21

Now fluoroscopy time is only one part

59:24

of the total radiation exposure

59:26

because the patient is not only getting fluoroscopy,

59:29

they also get c imaging.

59:32

The little subtraction angiography imaging,

59:35

therefore it is important is the just documenting

59:39

fluoroscopy time becomes almost less of a mute.

59:42

On the other hand, they need to focus on the total dose

59:46

to the patient and

59:48

that's available now on all the advanced

59:50

fluoroscopy machine.

59:52

The machine automatically creates a dose report

59:54

and display two things.

59:56

One is cumulative dose are Air Karma expressed in gra.

60:01

The second one is DAP or air, um, karma air product

60:05

or dose area product expressed in GRA centimeters square.

60:09

The, the DAP reading can be used

60:11

for effective dose estimation,

60:13

but more important in fluoroscopy,

60:16

the number which I am interested is the cumulative Air Karma

60:19

cumulative dose to the surface.

60:22

Because if that number reaches certain,

60:25

certain exceeds certain threshold,

60:27

I know the patient have a, a good possibility

60:30

of certain type of deterministic effect.

60:32

So we track based on the accumulative dose to the patient

60:36

and see if the patient needs to be examined

60:39

or alerted about any type of skin injury and so forth.

60:42

So for fluoroscopy cumulative Air Karma is

60:45

an important metric.

60:46

The second one is the D dap reading

60:49

for estimating long-term risk.

60:52

Thank you so much for answering

60:53

all those questions you got too.

60:55

That was very nice and, and,

60:56

and for, for spending more time, uh, with us.

60:59

Appreciate it. Yeah, and you can access today's recording

61:02

and all our previous noon conferences

61:04

by creating a free MRI online account.

61:06

And be sure to join us next week on Thursday,

61:09

April 18th at 12:00 PM Eastern, where Dr.

61:12

Steven Pomerance will deliver a lecture

61:14

and entitled MRI of the elbow.

61:16

You can register for that@mriline.com

61:18

and follow us on social media

61:20

for updates on future noom conferences.

61:22

Thanks again and have a great day.

61:25

Thank you.

Report

Faculty

Mahadevappa Mahesh, PhD, FACR, MS, FAAPM, FACMP, FSCCT, FIOMP

Professor of Radiology and Cardiology

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Tags

Women's Health

Uterus

Testicles

Spine

Small Bowel

Scrotum

Prostate/seminal vesicles

Peritoneum/Mesentery

Pediatrics

Ovaries

Orbit

Neonatal

Neck soft tissues

MRI

Lungs

Liver

Large Bowel-Colon

Knee

Kidneys

Iatrogenic

Hip & Thigh

Gynecologic (GYN)

Foot & Ankle

Fallopian Tubes

Epididymis

Elbow & Forearm

Brain

Bone & Soft Tissues

Body

Bladder

Appendix

Adrenals

Acquired/Developmental