降低颅缝闭闭的头部计算机断层扫描辐射剂量:制度变化和文献回顾

Luke Bauerle, Steven H. Lin, Cody Tucker, R. Eskandari
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摘要

颅缝闭锁(CS)的计算机断层扫描(CT)的明确诊断是很容易获得的,然而,暴露于电离辐射往往是一个困难的家长和从业人员停止。降低头部CT辐射暴露有助于降低风险,提高诊断利用率。该研究的目的是使用“新”(超低剂量)方案量化CS患者头部CT的辐射暴露;比较之前的标准CT方案;总结使用其他低剂量方案的儿童头部CT扫描累积辐射剂量的已发表报告。回顾性研究于2014年8月至2022年2月期间,年龄小于2岁的CS手术矫正患者。计算mSv累积有效剂量(CED),进行描述性统计,并报告平均值±标准差。对儿童患者头部CT累积辐射暴露进行文献检索,并对电离辐射测量进行分析。44例患者符合纳入标准:女性17例,男性27例。使用“新”方案获得头部CT的患者的CED暴露量为0.32 mSv±0.07,而之前的标准方案为5.25 mSv±2.79 (p < 0.0001)。五项研究专门研究了通过使用低剂量CT方案减少CS患者CT扫描产生的电离辐射。这些研究显示总体CED值在0.015毫西弗至0.77毫西弗之间。我们的新CT方案使电离辐射减少了94%。超低剂量CT方案提供类似的诊断数据,而不会丢失CS的骨分化,并且可以很容易地纳入儿童医院的工作流程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lowering head computed tomography radiation dose for craniosynostosis: An institutional change and review of literature
Definitive diagnosis of Craniosynostosis (CS) with computed tomography (CT) is readily available, however, exposure to ionizing radiation is often a hard stop for parents and practitioners. Lowering head CT radiation exposure helps mitigate risks and improves diagnostic utilization. The purpose of the study is to quantify radiation exposure from head CT in patients with CS using a ‘new’ (ultra-low dose) protocol; compare prior standard CT protocol; summarize published reports on cumulative radiation doses from pediatric head CT scans utilizing other low-dose protocols. A retrospective study was conducted on patients undergoing surgical correction of CS, aged less than 2 years, between August 2014 and February 2022. Cumulative effective dose (CED) in mSv was calculated, descriptive statistics were performed, and mean ± SD was reported. A literature search was conducted describing cumulative radiation exposure from head CT in pediatric patients and analyzed for ionizing radiation measurements. Forty-four patients met inclusion criteria: 17 females and 27 males. Patients who obtained head CT using the ‘New’ protocol resulted in lower CED exposure of 0.32 mSv ± 0.07 compared to the prior standard protocol at 5.25 mSv ± 2.79 (p < 0.0001). Five studies specifically investigated the reduction of ionizing radiation from CT scans in patients with CS via the utilization of low-dose CT protocols. These studies displayed overall CED values ranging from 0.015 mSv to 0.77 mSv. Our new CT protocol resulted in 94% reduction of ionizing radiation. Ultra-low dose CT protocols provide similar diagnostic data without loss of bone differentiation in CS and can be easily incorporated into the workflow of a children’s hospital.
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