BITEWING DOSIMETRY OF 3-DIMENSIONAL INTRAORAL TOMOSYNTHESIS DENTAL X-RAY IMAGING SYSTEM
Autor: | Angela Broome, André Mol, Enrique Platin, Ben Johnson, C. Laprade |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Dosimeter
business.industry X-ray 030206 dentistry Effective dose (radiation) Tomosynthesis Imaging phantom Pathology and Forensic Medicine Ionizing radiation 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Dosimetry Medicine Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Dentistry (miscellaneous) Surgery Cancer development Oral Surgery Nuclear medicine business |
Zdroj: | Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology. 130:e62-e63 |
ISSN: | 2212-4403 |
Popis: | Background There is substantial evidence for a cumulative dose-related response to ionizing radiation in the form of cancer development years after initial exposure. Therefore, this study focused on effective dose, a quantity with direct correlations to biologic risk from dental x-ray exposures. Objective The purpose of this study was to measure doses and to calculate the effective doses (E) resulting from exposure parameters that are used for stationary intraoral tomosynthesis (s-IOT) and conventional imaging for adult posterior bitewing examinations of the dentition. Additionally, this study sought to evaluate the effect of sensor attenuation on patient dose. Materials and Methods To meet these aims, a human tissue equivalent adult phantom and optically stimulated luminescent (Landauer, Inc., Glenwood, IL) dosimeters were used to measure dose produced during simulated posterior bitewing examinations (n = 4). Optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters were used to measure x-ray dose at 24 head and neck tissue/organ sites of interest. Dosimetry was acquired by using a tissue equivalent phantom simulating the anatomy of an average adult male (AtomMax Model 711 HN,CIRS Inc., Norfolk, VA). Exposure parameters used were 70 kV/7 mA (0.7 mAs) and 0.12 mAs for s-IOT and conventional (KaVo FOCUS, Charlotte, NC), respectively. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Tukey’s HSD (“honest significant difference”) statistics on dose were utilized to demonstrate significant data relationships. Results Effective dose by modality (μSv) Modality Dose (μSv) Rectangular Conventional with Sensor 1.1 Rectangular Conventional without sensor 4.6 s-IOT with sensor 5.9 s-IOT without sensor 11.9 Circular Conventional with sensor 8.2 Circular Conventional without sensor 15.7 Sensor-present doses were significantly lower than sensor-absent for all modalities (P = .0001). Significant differences in E were found for all modality combinations with the exception of s-IOT sensor-present modalities vs conventional rectangular sensor-absent modalities (P = .0482). Discussion Unadjusted s-IOT dose was 26% less than conventional-circular exposures and 61% greater than conventional-rectangular for sensor-absent exposures. Unadjusted sensor-present s-IOT dose was 28% less than conventional-circular exposures and 81% greater than conventional-rectangular exposures. Despite a 4-fold increase in mAs for s-IOT imaging compared with conventional imaging, E from s-IOT imaging was at least 26% less than the current most commonly implemented bitewing technique, conventional-circular, while providing substantially greater diagnostic yield in the form of 3-dimensional (3-D) information. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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