The impact of digital imaging on patient doses during barium studies
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The British Journal of Radiology
- Vol. 68 (813), 992-996
- https://doi.org/10.1259/0007-1285-68-813-992
Abstract
Barium studies performed on 10 digital and four non-digital fluoroscopic systems were monitored with dose-area product meters as part of a Regional Patient Dosimetry Audit programme. The data have been collected using a computer to read and reset the dose-area product meter and also to collect patient and examination details. A comparison of dose-area product measurements from digital and non-digital fluoroscopy units on over 10,000 barium studies is presented. The data have been corrected according to patient size. The mean size corrected dose-area product for a barium meal examination was found to be 7.62 Gy cm2 for a digital set compared with 15.45 Gy cm2 for a non-digital set with 2462 and 1308 patients included in each measurement series, respectively. Dose-area products were also a factor of approximately two lower for barium enema, barium swallow and barium follow-through examinations performed on digital systems.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estimation of effective dose from dose–area product measurements for barium meals and barium enemasThe British Journal of Radiology, 1994
- A comparison of radiation dose in examination of the abdomen using different radiological imaging techniquesThe British Journal of Radiology, 1994
- An investigation into the radiation dose associated with different imaging systems for chest radiologyThe British Journal of Radiology, 1994
- An International Intercomparison of Dose-Area Product MetersRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 1992
- Reference Man in Diagnostic Radiology DosimetryRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 1992
- Digital Radiography: Current and Future TrendsThe British Journal of Radiology, 1985
- A survey of radiation doses to patients in five common diagnostic examinations. I. Principles and techniques of dose evaluation by indirect measurement II. Survey resultsThe British Journal of Radiology, 1983