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First published online January 3, 2007
British Journal of Radiology (2007) 80, 362-366
© 2007 British Institute of Radiology
doi: 10.1259/bjr/95349672

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Full paper

Patient dose from 3D rotational neurovascular studies

R R Bridcut, BSc, MSc1, E Murphy, BSc, MSc2, A Workman, BSc, MSc1, P Flynn, MRCP, FRCR2 and R J Winder, BSc, MSc, PhD3

1 Northern Ireland Regional Medical Physics Agency, Forster Green Hospital, Belfast BT8 6HD, 2 Department of Neuroradiology, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast BT12 6BA, 3 Health and Rehabilitation Research Institute, University of Ulster, Shore Road, Newtonabbey BT37 0QB, UK

Correspondence: Miss Ruth R Bridcut, Radiation Protection and Imaging, Northern Ireland Medical Physics Agency, Forster Green Hospital, 110 Saintfield Road, Belfast, N. Ireland, UK. E-mail: ruth.bridcut{at}mpa.n-i.nhs.uk

The use of image-guided interventional radiological techniques is increasing in prevalence and complexity. Imaging system developments have helped improve the information available to interventionalists to plan and guide procedures. Information on doses to patients resulting from alternative imaging techniques or protocols is useful for both the process of justifying particular procedures and in optimizing the resultant exposures. Such information is not always available, especially for new or developing imaging techniques. We have undertaken a study of doses to patients associated with two alternative imaging methods for pre-intervention assessment of intracranial aneurysms. In the first technique the aneurysm is assessed from a series of digital subtraction angiography (DSA) runs taken at different imaging projections. The second technique involved acquiring images from one single image run while the imaging system rotated 180° around the patient's head. In this technique, the aneurysm was then evaluated from a 3D reconstruction of the projection images. Effective doses were calculated using a computer model to simulate the exposure geometry and parameters. The mean dose from the DSA protocol used at our centre was 3.4 mSv and from the 3D rotational angiography (RA) technique was 0.20 mSv.







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