Radiation Protection in Pediatrics

Radiation Protection in Pediatrics

Radiation Protection in Pediatrics

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Principles & ALARA - Tiny Patients, Big Care

  • Pediatric tissues: ↑ radiosensitivity due to rapid cell division.
  • Longer life expectancy: ↑ risk for stochastic effects (e.g., cancer) to manifest.
  • Core Principles:
    • Justification: Benefit of exam outweighs radiation risk. Each exposure must be clinically indicated.
    • Optimisation: ALARA (As Low As Reasonably Achievable).
      • Use lowest possible radiation dose without compromising diagnostic quality.
      • Techniques: appropriate ↑kVp, ↓mAs, tight collimation, shielding (gonadal, thyroid).
  • Diagnostic Reference Levels (DRLs) are crucial for pediatric dose optimisation. Scatter radiation in pediatric radiography study

⭐ Children have a 2-10 times higher risk of radiation-induced cancer compared to adults receiving an identical radiation dose for many tissues and cancer types.

Radiation Effects - Sensitive Sprouts

  • Children: ↑ radiosensitivity due to:
    • Rapidly dividing cells.
    • Longer life expectancy for effects to manifest.
  • Two main effect types:
    • Stochastic: No threshold, probability ↑ with dose (e.g., cancer, genetic mutations).
    • Deterministic: Threshold dose exists, severity ↑ with dose (e.g., skin erythema, cataracts, sterility).
  • Highly sensitive tissues: Bone marrow, gonads, thyroid, lens, breast.

⭐ Children are estimated to be 2-10 times more sensitive to radiation-induced carcinogenesis than adults for the same dose, with specific risk varying by age and tissue type.

Dose Metrics & DRLs - Measuring Minimally

  • Key Metrics:
    • Effective Dose (E): Overall risk (Sv). $E = \sum (H_T \times W_T)$.
    • CTDIvol: CT dose per slice (mGy). $CTDI_{vol} = \frac{CTDI_w}{Pitch}$.
    • DAP: Fluoro/X-ray dose (mGy.cm²).
    • SSDE: Size-adjusted CTDIvol (peds).
  • Diagnostic Reference Levels (DRLs):
    • Advisory levels, not limits.
    • Typically 75th percentile of doses.
    • Aid high dose identification & protocol optimization.
    • Pediatric DRLs: age/weight specific.

⭐ DRLs are benchmarks for optimization, not strict limits. Consistently exceeding them warrants a review of imaging protocols and equipment performance.

Protection Techniques - Shielding Superstars

  • Concept: Use attenuating materials (Lead/Pb-equivalents) to block radiation.
  • Standard Thickness: 0.25 mm to 0.5 mm Pb-equivalent. Higher kVp may need thicker shields.
  • Types & Application:
    • Gonad shields: Flat contact, shadow shields. Critical for all pediatric pelvic/hip X-rays.
    • Thyroid shields (collars): For neck, chest, spine imaging.
    • Eye shields/Lead glasses: Protect sensitive lens during head CT/fluoro.
    • Breast shields: Bismuth shields for CT; lead for general radiography.
  • Placement: Directly on/close to patient, without obscuring anatomy of interest.

⭐ Gonadal shielding can reduce female gonad dose by up to 50% and male gonad dose by up to 95% if placed correctly.

Special Considerations - Guardians & Guides

  • Guardians (Parents/Carers):
    • Presence encouraged for child comfort & cooperation.
    • Provided lead apron (min. 0.25-0.5 mm Pb).
    • Must not be pregnant.
    • Positioned to avoid direct beam.
    • Preferred for immobilization if needed.
  • Staff (Guides):
    • Adhere to ALARA principle.
    • Use PPE (lead aprons, thyroid shields).
    • Maximize distance from source.
    • Minimize exposure time.
  • Communication:
    • Explain procedure, benefits, risks to guardians.
    • Address concerns; obtain informed consent.

⭐ If a parent assists in immobilization, they must wear a lead apron & gloves, and avoid the primary beam.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • ALARA principle (As Low As Reasonably Achievable) guides all pediatric imaging.
  • Children have ↑ radiosensitivity due to active cell division and longer lifespan.
  • Justification (net benefit) and Optimization (lowest dose) are fundamental.
  • Employ child-specific protocols and effective dose reduction techniques.
  • Crucial: Shielding of gonads, thyroid, and breast tissue.
  • Prioritize non-ionizing modalities (USG, MRI) whenever clinically suitable.
  • Utilize Diagnostic Reference Levels (DRLs) for pediatric exams.

Practice Questions: Radiation Protection in Pediatrics

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Bragg peak effect is most noticeable in which of the following?

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Flashcards: Radiation Protection in Pediatrics

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The X-ray of choice to determine the skeletal age of a 1 to 13 year-old boy is X-ray of the _____ and wrist.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

The X-ray of choice to determine the skeletal age of a 1 to 13 year-old boy is X-ray of the _____ and wrist.

hands

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