A narrative review on the reduction of effective dose to a paediatric patient by using different combinations of kVp, mAs and additional filtration whilst maintaining image quality


Autoria(s): Bloomfield, Charlotte; Boavida, Filipa; Chabloz, Diane; Crausaz, Emilie; Huizinga, Elsbeth; Hustveit, Hanne; Knight, Heidi; Pereira, Ana; Harsaker, Vanja; Schaake, Wouter; Visser, Ruurd
Data(s)

27/08/2015

27/08/2015

2015

Resumo

This paper reviews the literature for lowering of dose to paediatric patients through use of exposure factors and additional filtration. Dose reference levels set by The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) will be considered. Guidance was put in place in 1996 requires updating to come into line with modern imaging equipment. There is a wide range of literature that specifies that grids should not be used on paediatric patients. Although much of the literature advocates additional filtration, contrasting views on the relative benefits of using aluminium or copper filtration, and their effects on dose reduction and image quality can vary. Changing kVp and mAs has an effect on the dose to the patient and image quality. Collimation protects adjacent structures whilst reducing scattered radiation.

Identificador

Bloomfield C, Boavida F, Chabloz D, Crausaz E, Huizinga E, Pereira A, et al. A narrative review on the reduction of effective dose to a paediatric patient by using different combinations of kVp, mAs and additional filtration whilst maintaining image quality. In Hogg P, Lança L, editors. OPTIMAX 2014 – Radiation dose and image quality optimisation in medical imaging. Salford, UK: Open Source, University of Salford; 2015. p. 81-4.

9781907842603

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.21/5031

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Open Source, University of Salford

Relação

http://usir.salford.ac.uk/34439/

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Radioterapia #Paediatric patients #Dose reduction #Pelvis #Additional filters #Low kVp, mAs #Computer tomography
Tipo

bookPart