您的位置: 骨科在线 > 学术园地 > 期刊导读 > Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery > 正文

Leaded Eyeglasses Substantially Reduce Radiation Exposure of the Surgeon’s Eyes During Acquisition of Typical Fluoroscopic Views of the Hip and Pelvis

第一作者:Sean Burns

2013-08-08 点击量:380   我要说

Sean Burns, Raymond Thornton, Lawrence T. Dauer
Brian Quinn,  Daniel Miodownik,  David J. Hak
Background: 

Despite recommendations to do so, few orthopaedists wear leaded glasses when performing operative fluoroscopy. Radiation exposure to the ocular lens causes cataracts, and regulatory limits for maximum annual occupational exposure to the eye continue to be revised downward.

Methods: 

Using anthropomorphic patient and surgeon phantoms, radiation dose at the surgeon phantom’s lens was measured with and without leaded glasses during fluoroscopic acquisition of sixteen common pelvic and hip views. The magnitude of lens dose reduction from leaded glasses was calculated by dividing the unprotected dose by the dose measured behind leaded glasses.

 

Results: 

On average, the use of leaded glasses reduced radiation to the surgeon phantom’s eye by tenfold, a 90% reduction in dose. However, there was widespread variation in the amount of radiation that reached the phantom surgeon’s eye among the various radiographic projections we studied. Without leaded glasses, the dose measured at the surgeon’s lens varied more than 250-fold among these sixteen different views.

 

Conclusions: 

In addition to protecting the surgeon’s eye from the deleterious effects of radiation, the use of leaded glasses could permit an orthopaedist to perform fluoroscopic views on up to ten times more patients before reaching the annual dose limit of 20 mSv of radiation to the eye recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection. Personal safety and adherence to limits of occupational radiation exposure should compel orthopaedists to wear leaded glasses for fluoroscopic procedures if other protective barriers are not in use.

 

Clinical Relevance: 

Leaded glasses are a powerful tool for reducing the orthopaedic surgeon’s lens exposure to radiation during acquisition of common intraoperative fluoroscopic views.

分享到:

   


骨科在线 北京经纬在线网络科技有限公司

京ICP备15001394号-2 京公网安备11010502051256号

 信息产业部备案管理系统

地址:北京市朝阳区朝阳门北大街乙12号1号楼8层08公寓H

联系电话:010-85615836

Email:orth@orthonline.com.cn