Department of Medical Physics, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kindai University, Osaka, Japan.
Department of Radiology, Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.
Health Phys. 2020 Jun;118(6):609-614. doi: 10.1097/HP.0000000000001177.
This study investigates whether a novel tungsten-containing rubber shield could be used as substitute shielding material in interventional radiology to reduce the occupational exposure of operators to scattered radiation from a patient. The tungsten-containing rubber is a lead-free radiation-shielding material that contains as much as 90% tungsten powder by weight. Air kerma rates of scattered radiation from solid-plate phantoms, simulating a patient, were measured with a semiconductor dosimeter at the height of the operator's eye (1,600 mm from the floor), chest (1,300 mm), waist (1,000 mm), and knee (600 mm) with and without tungsten-containing rubber shielding (1-5 mm thickness). The tungsten-containing rubber and a commercial shielding material (RADPAD) were affixed onto the phantom on the operator's side, and reductions in air kerma rates were compared. Reduction rates for tungsten-containing rubber shielding with thicknesses of 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 mm at each height level were as follows: 70.37 ± 0.40%, 72.17 ± 0.29%, 72.95 ± 0.31%, 72.58 ± 0.35%, and 73.63 ± 0.63% at eye level; 76.36 ± 0.19%, 77.13 ± 0.10%, 77.36 ± 0.14%, 77.62 ± 0.25%, and 77.66 ± 0.14% at chest level; 67.78 ± 0.31%, 68.12 ± 0.19%, 68.88 ± 0.28%, 68.97 ± 0.14%, and 68.85 ± 0.45% at waist level; and 0.14 ± 0.94%, 0.72 ± 0.56%, 1.08 ± 0.74%, 1.77 ± 0.80%, and 1.79 ± 1.82% at knee level, respectively. Reduction rates with RADPAD were 61.80 ± 0.67%, 60.33 ± 0.61%, 64.70 ± 0.25%, and 0.14 ± 0.66% at eye, chest, waist, and knee levels, respectively. The shielding ability of the 1 mm tungsten-containing rubber was superior to that of RADPAD. The tungsten-containing rubber could be employed to minimize an operator's radiation exposure instead of the commercial shielding material in interventional radiology.
本研究旨在探讨一种新型含钨橡胶屏蔽材料是否可作为介入放射学中替代屏蔽材料,以降低操作人员对患者散射辐射的职业暴露。含钨橡胶是一种无铅辐射屏蔽材料,其重量比高达 90%的钨粉。使用半导体剂量仪在操作人员眼部高度(距地面 1600 毫米)、胸部(1300 毫米)、腰部(1000 毫米)和膝盖(600 毫米)处测量模拟患者的实心板体模的散射辐射空气比释动能率,同时测量有无含钨橡胶屏蔽(1-5 毫米厚)的情况。将含钨橡胶和一种商业屏蔽材料(RADPAD)贴在操作人员一侧的体模上,比较空气比释动能率的降低情况。在各个高度水平下,厚度为 1、2、3、4 和 5 毫米的含钨橡胶屏蔽的降低率分别为:眼部水平 70.37 ± 0.40%、72.17 ± 0.29%、72.95 ± 0.31%、72.58 ± 0.35%和 73.63 ± 0.63%;胸部水平 76.36 ± 0.19%、77.13 ± 0.10%、77.36 ± 0.14%、77.62 ± 0.25%和 77.66 ± 0.14%;腰部水平 67.78 ± 0.31%、68.12 ± 0.19%、68.88 ± 0.28%、68.97 ± 0.14%和 68.85 ± 0.45%;膝盖水平 0.14 ± 0.94%、0.72 ± 0.56%、1.08 ± 0.74%、1.77 ± 0.80%和 1.79 ± 1.82%。RADPAD 的降低率分别为 61.80 ± 0.67%、60.33 ± 0.61%、64.70 ± 0.25%和 0.14 ± 0.66%。1 毫米厚的含钨橡胶的屏蔽能力优于 RADPAD。在介入放射学中,含钨橡胶可用于最小化操作人员的辐射暴露,而不是使用商业屏蔽材料。