Abstract

We investigated the main question of whether thermoluminescent dosimeters indicate the correct dose when exposed to magnetic fields from low stray fields up to high magnetic resonance imaging fields inside human magnetic resonance imaging scanners (0.05 T ≤ B ≤ 7 T) during and after irradiation. Medical personnel working in radiology, oncology, or nuclear medicine are regularly monitored with thermoluminescent dosimeters. They might also enter the magnetic field of a magnetic resonance imaging scanner while supervising patients as well as during positron emission tomography-magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance imaging-linac integrated imaging systems and will therefore be exposed to the magnetic fields of magnetic resonance imaging scanners and low stray fields of several millitesla outside of the magnetic resonance imaging scanner, not only before and after, but also during irradiation. Panasonic thermoluminescent dosimetry badges and ring dosimeters for personal monitoring were exposed to magnetic fields originating from a 7 T and a 3 T magnetic resonance imaging scanner as well as neodymium permanent magnets. Four different sealed Cs sources were used in two sets of experiments: (1) magnetically induced fading: irradiated thermoluminescent dosimeters (D ≈ 100 mSv) were exposed to a strong magnetic field (B = 7 T) of a human high-field magnetic resonance imaging scanner after irradiation; no magnetically induced fading (magnetoluminescence) for LiBO:Cu or CaSO:Tm was observed; (2) magnetically induced attenuation: thermoluminescent dosimeters were placed during irradiation in a magnetic field for about 60 h; a significantly reduced dose response was observed for LiBO:Cu-interestingly not at maximum B ≈ 7 T but at B ≈ 0.2 T. This experimental observation is possibly relevant especially for medical and technical personnel in nuclear medicine before and during a magnetic resonance imaging scanning procedure. Follow-up studies need to be made to clarify the kinetics of this effect.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call