Audible monitor reduces radiation exposure to health workers: study

Dallas – A beeping monitor that detects radiation exposure during certain heart procedures can help protect medical workers, according to a recent study from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.

Researchers analyzed workers who treated more than 500 patients undergoing diagnostic coronary angiography – which uses dye and X-rays to check blood flow in the heart arteries – or percutaneous coronary intervention, such as stent placement.

In one group, workers wore a standard dosimetry badge that was measured for radiation after a month. In the other group, workers wore a device that beeped every 15 minutes when radiation was low, once every 20 seconds when radiation was high, and constantly when radiation was extreme.

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Results showed that the workers who wore the audible device were exposed to about one-third less radiation.

A university press release states that no dose of radiation is safe. The researchers recommended that workers decrease exposure by decreasing fluoroscopy time and the number of X-ray images taken of the coronary arteries per second; repositioning the patient, the worker or the radiation shield; and adding to shielding.

The study was published in the December issue of Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions.

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