2006
DOI: 10.1177/0310057x0603400235
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Radiation Exposure during Anaesthetic Practice

Abstract: With anaesthesia being administered more often outside of theatre in areas such as radiology suites, the occupational risk to anaesthetists from ionizing radiation may have increased. To determine radiation exposure from X-ray sources during normal anaesthetic practice, passive personal radiation monitoring devices were used to record the occupational exposure to radiation of 29 anaesthetists over a one calendar month period. Occupational whole body effective dose was calculated and extrapolated to give an est… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…[17] The anesthesiologist is exposed to radiation six times more than other personals during the neurointerventional angiographic procedures and the increasing use of C-arm in the orthopedic procedures exposes the anesthesiologists to beyond the recommended dose limit of radiation of 15 mSv/yr and the cumulative effects of radiation affect entire body or cause localized damage to a certain area of the body such as cataract. [1821] Anesthesiologist as a part of disaster management team has to face nuclear hazards occasionally such as the deadly Chernobyl and the latest is the Fukushima nuclear hazard.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[17] The anesthesiologist is exposed to radiation six times more than other personals during the neurointerventional angiographic procedures and the increasing use of C-arm in the orthopedic procedures exposes the anesthesiologists to beyond the recommended dose limit of radiation of 15 mSv/yr and the cumulative effects of radiation affect entire body or cause localized damage to a certain area of the body such as cataract. [1821] Anesthesiologist as a part of disaster management team has to face nuclear hazards occasionally such as the deadly Chernobyl and the latest is the Fukushima nuclear hazard.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%