Affiliation:
1. Department of Human Structure and Repair Ghent University Ghent Belgium
2. Heart Center Ghent University Hospital Ghent Belgium
3. Department of Paediatric Cardiology Ghent University Hospital Ghent Belgium
Abstract
Background
Dual axis rotational coronary angiography (
DARCA
) reduces radiation exposure during coronary angiography on older x‐ray systems. The purpose of the current study is to quantify patient and staff radiation exposure using
DARCA
on a modality already equipped with dose‐reducing technology. Additionally, we assessed applicability of 1 dose area product to effective dose conversion factor for both
DARCA
and conventional coronary angiography (
CCA
) procedures.
Methods and Results
Twenty patients were examined using
DARCA
and were compared with 20 age‐, sex‐, and body mass index–matched patients selected from a prior study using
CCA
on the same x‐ray modality. All irradiation events are simulated using
PCXMC
(
STUK
, Finland) to determine organ and effective doses. Moreover, for
DARCA
each frame is simulated. Staff dose is measured using active personal dosimeters (DoseAware, Philips Healthcare, The Netherlands). With
DARCA
, median cumulative dose area product is reduced by 57% (ie, 7.41 versus 17.19 Gy·cm
2
). Effective dose conversion factors of
CCA
and
DARCA
are slightly different, yet this difference is not statistically significant. The occupational dose at physician's chest, leg, and collar level are reduced by 60%, 56%, and 16%, respectively, of which the first 2 reached statistical significance. Median effective dose is reduced from 4.75 mSv in
CCA
to 2.22 mSv in
DARCA
procedures, where the latter is further reduced to 1.79 mSv when excluding ventriculography.
Conclusions
During invasive coronary angiography,
DARCA
reduces radiation exposure even further toward low‐dose values on a system already equipped with advanced image processing and noise reduction algorithms. For both
DARCA
and
CCA
procedures, using 1 effective dose conversion factor of 0.30 mSv·Gy
−1
·cm
−2
is feasible.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
5 articles.
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