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Limits For Exposure To Ionizing Radiation. RADL 70 Kyle Thornton. A Little Background. Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen discovered x-rays in 1895 In 1896, Henri Becquerel observed rays coming from a uranium containing substance In 1898, Pierre and Marie Curie discovered radium. More Background.
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Limits For Exposure To Ionizing Radiation RADL 70 Kyle Thornton
A Little Background • Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen discovered x-rays in 1895 • In 1896, Henri Becquerel observed rays coming from a uranium containing substance • In 1898, Pierre and Marie Curie discovered radium
More Background • Becquerel noticed a skin reaction (erythema) 2 weeks after carrying radium in his pocket • In 1896, hair loss was also noted from radiation exposure • Pierre Curie exposed areas of his own skin to radium to observe the results • The first fatality connected with radiation exposure was Clarence Daly who worked for Thomas Edison
A Little More Background • The first safe dose was established in 1902 as 7 minutes to prevent erythema • Shielding was rarely used • Equipment operators would demonstrate by exposing themselves to the beam to prove it didn’t hurt • As a consequence, early radiologists often had multiple amputations of fingers and an increased incidence of leukemia
Skin Erythema Dose • The skin erythema dose was the unit under which there would be a negligible risk of developing erythema • It was determined that different individuals were either less or more sensitive to radiation, therefore were more or less inclined to develop erythema • The Roentgen was formally adopted in 1928
Organizations That Derive Standards • UNSCEAR, BEIR • Research and report • ICRP, NCRP, CRCPD • Report, make recommendations • State and federal regulations, NRC, FDA, EPA, OSHA • Regulatory agencies
UNSCEAR – United Nations Scientific Committee on Effects of Atomic Radiation • Established in 1955 • Assesses and reports on exposures to humans and the environment to ionizing radiation from natural sources, man-made practices, and accidental releases • Findings are based on epidemiological and research findings
BEIR – National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation • Advisory group to UNSCEAR • Reviews studies of effects of ionizing radiation on humans • Formulates reports
ICRP – International Council on Radiological Protection • Formed in 1928 • Considered to be the international authority on the safe use of sources of ionizing radiation • Makes recommendations to regulatory agencies based on reports from agencies such as BEIR and UNSCEAR • Not a regulatory agency
NCRP – National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement • A national organization that reviews recommendations from ICRP • Publishes reports • Not an enforcement agency, makes recommendations • Many recommendations from this agency are used as national radiation protection standards
CRCPD – Conference of Radiation Control Program Directors • Established in 1968 – made up of individuals in state and local government who regulate and control the use of radiation sources • Developed the Suggested State Regulations for Control of Radiation
Regulatory Agencies • U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) • Agreement states – 29 members, California is one of them • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) • U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) • U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
NRC • Established in the 1940’s as the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission • Has the power to enforce radiation protection standards • Does not regulate or inspect diagnostic imaging facilities • Oversees the nuclear energy industry • Publishes rules and regulations in Title 10 of U.S. Code of Federal Regulations
Agreement State • States that have had the authority to regulate transferred to them by the NRC • Before transfer can occur, it must be determined that the state’s radiation safety program is compatible with that of the NRC • Must protect public health and safety
EPA • Established by the executive branch in 1970 • Oversees general area of environmental monitoring • Provides citations for non-compliance
FDA • Regulates the design and manufacture of electronic products by virtue of the Radiation Control Health and Safety Act of 1968 • Inspects diagnostic x-ray equipment • Establishes specific operational standards for x-ray equipment
OSHA • A monitoring agency in places of employment, mostly in industry • Regulates occupational exposure to radiation • Oversees regulations for training programs • Oversees “right to know” regulations
State Licensure Requirements • A voluntary process designed to ensure safe operation of radiologic equipment • As many as half of the operators of radiologic equipment in the U.S. are not certified • Most studies have proved that licensed operators provide better radiation protection • The goal is to ensure that operators meet minimum safety standards thereby delivering quality patient care
Radiation Safety Officers and Medical Physicists • A designated person in an institution approved by the NRC and the state • Ensures that accepted guidelines for radiation protection are observed and practiced in that institution • Responsible for the formation of the institutional Radiation Safety Program
Effective Dose Equivalent Limiting System • Current method for assessing radiation exposure and associated risk to radiation workers and the general public • The threshold dose that results in a negligible risk of bodily injury or genetic damage
Radiation Control Health and Safety Act of 1968 – Public Law 90-602 • Enacted to protect the public from the hazards of unnecessary radiation exposure from electronic equipment • Includes microwave ovens, color TV’s and diagnostic x-ray equipment • Falls under the jurisdiction of the FDA • Includes minimum standards for the manufacture, installation, assembly, and maintenance of machines used for radiologic procedures
Code of Standards for X-Ray Equipment Since August 1, 1974 • Positive beam limitation • Minimal permanent filtration • Exposure reproducibility and linearity • Beam limitation devices for fluoroscopic spot films • Presence of beam-on indicators • Inclusion of manual backup timers for AEC should the phototimer fail
Consumer-Patient Radiation Health and Safety Act of 1981 – Title 9 of Public Law 97-35 • Established minimal standards for accreditation of educational programs for persons who administer radiologic procedures • and • The certification of such persons • This was to ensure that medical/dental procedures are consistent with safety precautions and standards • No penalty exists for state non-compliance
Non-Stochastic Effects • Deterministic effects • There is a threshold dose for these effects • Early effects – erythema, decreased WBC count, epilation • Early serious effects – hematopoietic syndrome, GI syndrome, cerebrovascular syndrome • Acute radiation syndrome
Non-Stochastic Effects • Late effects • Cataracts • Fibrosis • Organ atrophy • Reduced fertility • Sterility • Loss of parenchymal cells
Stochastic Effects • Non-threshold, randomly occurring effects • Includes cancer, and genetic effects
NCRP Recommendations • TEDE – Total effective dose equivalent • 5 rem annually (50 mSv) • TED – Lifetime total effective dose • Should not exceed 10 mSv or 1 rem times that person’s age
Radiation Hormesis • A beneficial consequence of constant exposure to radiation exposure • Based on information from many studies • Follows lower-life form animals • Radiation induced mutations that are advantageous have occurred, i.e., lower incidence of cancer than that of the general population