A new digital angiography flat panel system reduces the radiation dose to patients undergoing interventional treatment for liver cancer by about one-fourth, a new study shows.
The study compared the radiation dose to patients skin during transcatheter arterial embolization, a procedure that blocks the flow of a blood to a tumor. Doses were assessed for 12 patients using a new angiography unit with a digital flat-panel system and 12 using a conventional unit for angiographic imaging.
The maximal skin dose to the patients ranged from 510-1,882 mGy using the conventional unit, said Shigeru Suzuki, MD of Teikyo University School of Medicine in Tokyo, Japan. Dr. Suzuki is the lead author of the study. That compares to 130-467 mGy for the flat panel system, he said.
"In Japan, about one-third of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma are treated by transcatheter arterial embolization," said Dr. Suzuki. "It should be kept in mind that serious radiation skin injuries may be caused by interventional procedures," said Dr. Suzuki. "It is important for physicians to do everything they can to use the lowest dose of radiation," he said.
Keri J. Sperry | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.arrs.org
More articles from
Health and Medicine:
What a Sleep Study Can Reveal About Fibromyalgia
05.09.2008 | Michigan Technological University
Antioxidants - friend or foe?
04.09.2008 | Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Wissenschaftlichen Medizinischen Fachgesellschaften
Theory of the sun's role in formation of the solar system questioned
05.09.2008 | Earth Sciences
Caught in a trap: bumblebees vs. robotic crab spiders
05.09.2008 | Life Sciences
Do 68 molecules hold the key to understanding disease?
05.09.2008 | Life Sciences