Ward Valerie L, Strauss Keith J, Barnewolt Carol E, Zurakowski David, Venkatakrishnan Vaidehi, Fahey Frederic H, Lebowitz Robert L, Taylor George A
Department of Radiology, Children's Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Radiology. 2008 Dec;249(3):1002-9. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2492062066. Epub 2008 Oct 21.
To compare radiation exposure and effective dose in children who underwent voiding cystourethrography (VCUG) performed with grid-controlled variable-rate pulsed fluoroscopy (GCPFL) with radiation exposure and effective dose in children who underwent VCUG performed with continuous fluoroscopy (CFL) and to compare these effective doses with those estimated with radionuclide cystography (RNC).
Institutional review board approval was obtained, and the informed consent requirement was waived for this HIPAA-compliant retrospective study. Radiation exposure and fluoroscopy time during VCUG were reviewed in 145 children (75 girls, 70 boys; age range, 3 days to 8 years) who underwent GCPFL or CFL between 2001 and 2002. Children were grouped on the basis of the fluoroscopy unit used and their supine anteroposterior abdominal diameter (group 1, 8.0-8.5-cm diameter; group 2, 10-11-cm diameter; group 3, 12-13-cm diameter). Analysis of variance was used to compare radiation exposure and fluoroscopy time between fluoroscopy units and patient diameter groups. Effective doses were calculated and compared for both fluoroscopes and for estimated RNC dose values.
GCPFL resulted in a significant reduction in total radiation exposure, which was at least eight times lower than that with CFL in all three groups (P < .001 for all). There was no significant difference in fluoroscopy time (P > .50). Effective radiation doses from GCPFL were approximately one order of magnitude lower than those from CFL but one order of magnitude higher than those from RNC.
In children, VCUG can be performed with a GCPFL unit that delivers radiation exposures that are at least eight times lower than those delivered by a conventional CFL unit.
http://radiology.rsnajnls.org/cgi/content/full/2492062066/DC1.
比较采用格栅控制可变率脉冲荧光透视(GCPFL)进行排尿性膀胱尿道造影(VCUG)的儿童与采用连续荧光透视(CFL)进行VCUG的儿童的辐射暴露及有效剂量,并将这些有效剂量与放射性核素膀胱造影(RNC)估计的有效剂量进行比较。
本符合健康保险流通与责任法案(HIPAA)的回顾性研究获得了机构审查委员会的批准,并免除了知情同意要求。回顾了2001年至2002年间接受GCPFL或CFL检查的145名儿童(75名女孩,70名男孩;年龄范围3天至8岁)在VCUG期间的辐射暴露及荧光透视时间。根据所使用的荧光透视设备及其仰卧前后位腹部直径对儿童进行分组(第1组,直径8.0 - 8.5厘米;第2组,直径10 - 11厘米;第3组,直径12 - 13厘米)。采用方差分析比较荧光透视设备和患者直径组之间的辐射暴露及荧光透视时间。计算并比较了两种荧光透视设备的有效剂量以及RNC剂量估计值。
GCPFL使总辐射暴露显著降低,在所有三组中均至少比CFL低八倍(所有P值均 <.001)。荧光透视时间无显著差异(P >.50)。GCPFL的有效辐射剂量比CFL低约一个数量级,但比RNC高一个数量级。
对于儿童,可使用GCPFL设备进行VCUG,其辐射暴露比传统CFL设备至少低八倍。
http://radiology.rsnajnls.org/cgi/content/full/2492062066/DC1