Abstract
ObjectiveNumber and complexity of interventional cardiology procedures have increased during last years and can result in patient skin dose high enough to cause deterministic skin effects. The aim of the work is to investigate the correlation between Peak Skin Dose (PSD) and the dosimetric indicators directly registered by the radiological equipment and provide the physicians a tool to identify patients at risk of deterministic effects and include them into a follow-up program. MethodsPSD was measured in vivo using radiochromic Gafchromic XR-RV3 films, properly calibrated. DAP, Cumulative Dose at the interventional reference point (CD) and exposure time of each procedure were retrieved from the Radiation Dose Structured Reports created by an Allura Clarity Xper FD20 angiographic system. Linear correlation between PSD and both DAP and CD was investigated. Results42 interventional cardiology procedures (16 CA and 26 PTCA) were involved in the study. The dosimetric indicators values for PTCA are generally higher than those for CA, due to the different levels of procedure complexity. Mean PSD values were (103 ± 64) and (526 ± 436) mGy for CA and PTCA procedures. For CA, we found strong correlation both between PSD and DAP (r = 0.753) and PSD and CD (r = 0.782). For PTCA, good correlation both for DAP (r = 0.648) and CD (r = 0.649) was found. ConclusionsDAP and CD show strong correlation with PSD measured with Gafchromic films during interventional procedures. The proposed method allows the physician to estimate patient’s PSD from the dosimetric indicators that the radiological equipment display and record at the end of the procedure.
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