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citations
Cited by 285 publications
(205 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
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“…7 Most of the evidence on radiation-induced cancer risk comes from 4 groups: Japanese atomic bomb survivors, medically exposed populations, occupationally exposed groups, and environmentally exposed groups. 8 Of these groups, the Japanese atomic bomb survivors provide by far the most robust data. 9 These data provide clear evidence of radiation-induced cancer risk at doses above 100 mSv, 10 but this is of little relevance to medical imaging, except in cases of multiple high-dose examinations (CT, nuclear cardiology, and complex interventional radiology and cardiology procedures using fluoroscopy) in a short time period.…”
Section: Radiation Dosementioning
confidence: 99%
“…7 Most of the evidence on radiation-induced cancer risk comes from 4 groups: Japanese atomic bomb survivors, medically exposed populations, occupationally exposed groups, and environmentally exposed groups. 8 Of these groups, the Japanese atomic bomb survivors provide by far the most robust data. 9 These data provide clear evidence of radiation-induced cancer risk at doses above 100 mSv, 10 but this is of little relevance to medical imaging, except in cases of multiple high-dose examinations (CT, nuclear cardiology, and complex interventional radiology and cardiology procedures using fluoroscopy) in a short time period.…”
Section: Radiation Dosementioning
confidence: 99%
“…High-dose ionizing radiation (x-ray) has both deterministic and stochastic effects. In contrary to lower doses, radiation hazards are primarily stochastic rather than deterministic [2][3][4]. Undergraduate students will be future dentist who will be at risk of radiation biological hazards during their life.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10 Under this model, the cumulative exposure to radiation over a lifetime is linearly associated with an increased risk of cancer. Some contend that the model fails to account for the rate of radiation exposure or for cell capacity to repair radiation damage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%