Hand exposure in diagnostic nuclear medicine with 18F- and 99mTc-labelled radiopharmaceuticals - Results of the ORAMED project

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_09EB8AE25C27
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Hand exposure in diagnostic nuclear medicine with 18F- and 99mTc-labelled radiopharmaceuticals - Results of the ORAMED project
Title of the conference
ORAMED 2011, International Workshop on Optimization of Radiation Protection of Medical Staff
Author(s)
Carnicer A., Sans-Merce M., Baechler S., Barth I., Donadille L., Ferrari P., Fulop M., Ginjaume M., Gualdrini G., Krim S., Mariotti M., Ortega X., Rimpler A., Ruiz N., Vanhavere F.
Address
Barcelona, Spain, January 20-22, 2011
ISBN
1350-4487
ISSN-L
1350-4487
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2011
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
46
Series
Radiation Measurements
Pages
1277-1282
Language
english
Abstract
Workers performing preparation and administration of radiopharmaceuticals in NM departments are likely to receive high local skin doses to the hands which may even surpass the dose limit of 500 mSv whenever radiation protection standards are insufficient. A large measurement campaign was organised within the framework of the ORAMED project to determine the dose distribution across the hands received during preparation and administration of 18F- and 99mTc-labelled radiopharmaceuticals. The final data, collected over almost 3 years, include 641 measurements from 96 workers in 30 NM departments from 6 European countries. Results have provided levels of reference doses for the considered standard NM diagnostic procedures (mean maximum normalised skin dose of 230 μSv/GBq, 430 μSv/GBq, 930 μSv/GBq and 1200 μSv/GBq for the administration of 99mTc, preparation of 99mTc, administration of 18F and preparation of 18F, respectively). Finger dose was analysed as a function of the potential parameters of influence showing that shielding is the most efficient means of radiation protection to reduce skin dose. An appropriate method for routine monitoring of the extremities is also proposed: the base of the index finger of the non-dominant hand is a suitable position to place the ring dosemeter, with its sensitive part oriented towards the palm side; its reading may be multiplied by a factor of 6 to estimate the maximum local skin dose. Finally, results were compared to earlier published data, which correspond mostly to individual works with a reduced number of workers and measurements.
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Create date
15/02/2012 16:46
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:32
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