Interactive Transcript
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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.
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Today we are honored to welcome Dr.
0:32
M Mahesh for a lectured entitled Imaging Pregnant
0:34
and Pediatric Patients.
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Dr. Mahesh is the professor of radiology
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and cardiology at the Johns Hopkins University School
0:41
of Medicine, as well as the chair
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of the Radiation Control Committee
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for the Johns Hopkins Health Systems.
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Prior to that, he served as chief physicist
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for the Johns Hopkins Hospital for over 29 years.
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Dr. Mahesh has published over 150 peer review publications
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and given more than 150 international talks
1:00
and several grand rounds.
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Is the associate editor for the Journal of American College
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of Radiology and is a member
1:06
of numerous societies committees and council.
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At the end of the lecture, please join him in a q
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and a session where he will address questions you may
1:13
have on today's topic.
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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.
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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
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61:04
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61:06
And be sure to join us next week on Thursday,
61:09
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61:12
Steven Pomerance will deliver a lecture
61:14
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61:16
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61:18
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61:22
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61:25
Thank you.