University of Rochester/Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, NY, USA.
Injury. 2012 Jun;43(6):757-61. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2011.08.026. Epub 2011 Sep 9.
There has been considerable concern regarding radiation exposure to both the patient and treating surgeon and the possible risk of resulting malignancy. We sought to analyse the total effective dose of radiation that a cohort of orthopaedic trauma patients are exposed to during their inpatient hospitalisation and determine risk factors for greater exposure levels.
Following approval from the Institution Review Board, a search was conducted of a level I trauma centre database for radiation exposures to patients over a 1 year period. Patients were included if they had an ICD-9 code from 805 to 828, indicating a fracture involving the trunk (805-811) or extremities (812-828). We compared the total effective radiation dose in various injury patterns as well as those considered to be polytrauma patients to those who were not according to their injury severity score (ISS).
The records of 1357 trauma patients were available for review. The average patient age was 40.6 years and the mean ISS was 14.1. The average effective radiation dose for all patients during their hospitalisation was 31.6 mSv. There was a statistically significant difference in radiation exposure between patients with an ISS greater than 16 (48.6 mSv) versus those with an ISS equal to or less than 16 (23.5 mSv), p<0.001. Patients with spine trauma can be expected to get more than 15 mSv more radiation than non-spine patients, p<0.001. Extremity injuries received the least amount of radiation, spine only patients were next, then finally spine and extremity injury patients had the greatest exposures. Having a spine fracture, a pelvic fracture, a chest wall injury, or a long bone fracture were all risk factors for having more than 20 mSv of effective dose exposure. Patients under the age of 18 years did receive less radiation than the remainder of the cohort, p<0.001.
The average orthopaedic patient receives a total effective radiation dose of more than 30 mSv, much greater than is considered acceptable as a recommended permissible annual dose by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (20 mSv). These findings indicate that the average trauma patient (in particular those with polytrauma or fractures involving the spine, pelvis, chest wall, or long bones) is exposed to high levels of radiation during their inpatient hospitalisation. The treating physicians of such patients should take into consideration the large amounts of radiation their patients receive just during their initial hospitalisation, and be prudent with the ordering of imaging studies involving radiation exposure.
人们一直对患者和治疗医生所接受的辐射暴露以及由此导致的恶性肿瘤的潜在风险表示关注。我们旨在分析一组骨科创伤患者在住院期间所接受的总有效辐射剂量,并确定导致更高辐射暴露水平的危险因素。
在机构审查委员会批准后,我们对一家一级创伤中心的数据库进行了搜索,以查找过去一年中患者的辐射暴露情况。如果患者的 ICD-9 编码为 805 至 828,表明其躯干(805-811)或四肢(812-828)骨折,则将其纳入研究。我们比较了不同损伤模式以及根据损伤严重程度评分(ISS)被认为是多发伤患者与非多发伤患者的总有效辐射剂量。
共 1357 例创伤患者的记录可供审查。患者的平均年龄为 40.6 岁,ISS 平均为 14.1。所有患者在住院期间的平均有效辐射剂量为 31.6 mSv。ISS 大于 16 的患者(48.6 mSv)与 ISS 等于或小于 16 的患者(23.5 mSv)之间的辐射暴露存在统计学显著差异,p<0.001。患有脊柱创伤的患者比非脊柱患者多接受超过 15 mSv 的辐射,p<0.001。四肢损伤接受的辐射最少,脊柱仅患者次之,最后是脊柱和四肢损伤患者的暴露量最大。发生脊柱骨折、骨盆骨折、胸壁损伤或长骨骨折均是有效剂量暴露超过 20 mSv 的危险因素。年龄在 18 岁以下的患者比队列中的其余患者接受的辐射量少,p<0.001。
平均骨科患者接受的总有效辐射剂量超过 30 mSv,远高于国际辐射防护委员会(20 mSv)所建议的可接受的年度推荐剂量。这些发现表明,平均创伤患者(特别是那些有多发性创伤或涉及脊柱、骨盆、胸壁或长骨的骨折患者)在住院期间会受到高水平的辐射暴露。此类患者的治疗医生应考虑到患者在初次住院期间接受的大量辐射,并谨慎开具涉及辐射暴露的影像学检查。