降低常规诊断性脑血管造影的帧频和脉率:实践中的 ALARA 原则。

Arvin R Wali, Sarath Pathuri, Michael G Brandel, Ryan W Sindewald, Brian R Hirshman, Javier A Bravo, Jeffrey A Steinberg, Scott E Olson, Jeffrey S Pannell, Alexander Khalessi, David Santiago-Dieppa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:诊断性脑血管造影术(DCA)因其高灵敏度和高特异性而被广泛应用于神经外科,利用电离辐射来诊断和描述病理。消除不必要的辐射对降低患者、医疗服务提供者和医护人员的风险至关重要。我们研究了在常规 DCA 过程中降低脉冲率和帧率是否会在不影响图像质量的情况下减轻辐射负担:在实施质量改进方案后,我们对前瞻性采集的数据进行了回顾性审查,其中脉率和帧率分别从 15 p/s 降至 7.5 p/s 和 7.5 f/s 降至 4.0 f/s。计算了辐射剂量和暴露量。两名血管内神经外科医生对随机抽取的两种剂量的血管造影进行审查,并对其质量进行盲评:结果:共对40张连续血管造影进行了回顾性分析,其中20张在方案改变前,20张在方案改变后。干预后,辐射剂量、每次运行的辐射量、总曝光量和每次运行的曝光量均显著下降,即使在调整了体重指数后也是如此(所有 pConclusions):我们证明,对于常规 DCA,7.5 的脉搏率和 4.0 的帧频足以获得诊断信息,而不会影响图像质量或延长手术时间。为了患者、医疗服务提供者和医护人员的安全,我们强烈建议所有介入医师都能认识到辐射的使用,以避免不必要的辐射暴露和随之而来的健康风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reducing frame rate and pulse rate for routine diagnostic cerebral angiography: ALARA principles in practice.

Objective: Diagnostic cerebral angiograms (DCAs) are widely used in neurosurgery due to their high sensitivity and specificity to diagnose and characterize pathology using ionizing radiation. Eliminating unnecessary radiation is critical to reduce risk to patients, providers, and health care staff. We investigated if reducing pulse and frame rates during routine DCAs would decrease radiation burden without compromising image quality.

Methods: We performed a retrospective review of prospectively acquired data after implementing a quality improvement protocol in which pulse rate and frame rate were reduced from 15 p/s to 7.5 p/s and 7.5 f/s to 4.0 f/s respectively. Radiation doses and exposures were calculated. Two endovascular neurosurgeons reviewed randomly selected angiograms of both doses and blindly assessed their quality.

Results: A total of 40 consecutive angiograms were retrospectively analyzed, 20 prior to the protocol change and 20 after. After the intervention, radiation dose, radiation per run, total exposure, and exposure per run were all significantly decreased even after adjustment for BMI (all p<0.05). On multivariable analysis, we identified a 46% decrease in total radiation dose and 39% decrease in exposure without compromising image quality or procedure time.

Conclusions: We demonstrated that for routine DCAs, pulse rate of 7.5 with a frame rate of 4.0 is sufficient to obtain diagnostic information without compromising image quality or elongating procedure time. In the interest of patient, provider, and health care staff safety, we strongly encourage all interventionalists to be cognizant of radiation usage to avoid unnecessary radiation exposure and consequential health risks.

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