1 / 35

Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology

Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology. Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS) L09. Educational Objectives. Understand how digital radiology depends on Picture Archiving and Communications Systems (PACS) List the four components of PACS

phong
Download Presentation

Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS) L09

  2. Educational Objectives • Understand how digital radiology depends on Picture Archiving and Communications Systems (PACS) • List the four components of PACS • Explain how errors in each of the four components of PACS can contribute to unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  3. Digital Radiology • The application of modern information technology to the practice of radiology • Depends on automated systems for acquiring, transmitting, storing, and displaying digital images and associated data • Broader than just systems, includes how the systems are used Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  4. Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS) • A system capable of acquiring, transmitting, storing, retrieving, and displaying digital images and relevant patient data from various imaging sources, and capable of communicating the information over a network • Depends on interfaces to other medical information systems, such as the Radiology Information System (RIS) Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  5. Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) • An international standard (ISO) describing how radiology images are identified and formatted and how imaging devices communicate with each other • Jointly developed by the American College of Radiology and the National Electronic Manufacturers Association • Based on the ISO Open Standards Intercommunications (OSI) model • http://dicom.nema.org/ Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  6. Example of some of the DICOM tags in the header • DICOM headers store information for all images. • A rich source of information for prospective or retrospective patient exposure monitoring. Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L06 Avoiding Artefacts in Computed Radiography

  7. Some key points: • Images stored in some PACS cannot be (sometimes) post-processed. • This will be known in advance and appropriate post processing should be applied before the image is archived. • Allowing easy access to PACS and teleradiology to look at previous images can save exposures. • Except of the “for presentation” images, PACS save also images “for processing”. These may retrospectively be processed to recover information preventing re-exposures Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L06 Avoiding Artefacts in Computed Radiography

  8. Hospital Information System (HIS) • A system used to store and retrieve patient information. • An integrated computer system that may include or be linked to a radiology information system (RIS) Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  9. Health Level Seven (HL7) • An American National Standards Institute (ANSI) - accredited Standards Developing Organization (SDO) operating in the healthcare arena. • A messaging standard that enables healthcare applications to exchange key sets of clinical and administrative data • Defines data to be exchanged, timing of the interchange, and communication of certain errors to the application. • Supports functions such as security checks, participant identification, availability checks, exchange mechanism negotiations and, most importantly, data exchange structuring. • The most widely implemented standard for healthcare information in the world. Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  10. Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) • IHE is an initiative to improve the way computer systems in healthcare share information • IHE promotes use of established standards such as DICOM and HL7 • Systems developed in accordance with IHE • communicate with one another better • are easier to implement • enable care providers to use information more effectively • http://www.ihe.net/ Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  11. Four Major PACS Components 4. Display 1. Acquisition 2. Network • CR • -DX • -CT • -MR • -US • -DF • -OT -CRT -LCD -Laser Film RIS Image Database Status of Exams Status of Images 3. Archive Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  12. Acquisition errors Improper technique selection Wrong exam performed Image deleted Network errors Image lost Image corrupted Unable to transmit Archive errors Storage media corrupted Storage failure Sequestered exams Display errors Mis-calibration Associated data not displayed Artificial shutters Examples of errors within and between PACS components Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  13. Acquisition: Improper Technique Selection • Digital detectors are more tolerant of over-exposure than conventional detectors • Excess digital signal is scaled to provide consistent appearance • Consequence: is unnecessary radiation exposure to patient Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  14. Acquisition: Wrong exam performed • Radiographer may image thorax using digital examination intended for abdomen • Digital signal is rendered inappropriately for review • Consequence: may be repeated examination and unnecessary radiation exposure to patient Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  15. Acquisition: Image deleted • Radiographer may delete image at acquisition station without transmitting to PACS • It may not be possible to restore deleted image • Consequence: may be repeated examination and unnecessary radiation exposure to patient Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  16. Network: Image lost • Interruption in network service may result in losing the image • It may not be possible to retransmit image from acquisition station • Consequence: may be repeated examination and unnecessary radiation exposure to patient Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  17. Network: Image corrupted • Interruption in network service may degrade image • It may not be possible to retransmit image from acquisition station • Consequence: may be repeated examination and unnecessary radiation exposure to patient Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  18. Network: unable to transmit • Interruption in network services prevents transmission of images from acquisition station • Local storage capacity of acquisition station is limited • If acquisition continues, images can be lost, causing repeated examinations and unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  19. Archive: storage media corrupted • Storage media failure can prevent images from being retrieved • May require repeated examinations and unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  20. Archive: storage failure • Storage failure can prevent images from being archived • If images have already been deleted from acquisition station, may require repeated examinations and unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  21. Archive: images sequestered • When demographic and examination information on images does not match information from RIS, images may be hidden from view • Unless reconciliation is performed, radiographer may repeat examination with unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  22. Display: mis-calibration • Improperly calibrated display can make digital images appear under-exposed • Radiologist may instruct radiographer to repeat examinations or increase radiologic technique causing unnecessary radiation exposure to patients. Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  23. Display: associated data not displayed • Data accompanying the image may not be displayed for the radiologist • If missing data includes information on the radiographic technique or patient exposure, the radiologist cannot oversee radiographer practice • Without radiologist oversight, radiographers may perform examinations with unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  24. Display: artificial shutters • To improve contrast, radiographer may add artificial collimation • When artificial shutters are non-transparent, radiologist cannot oversee radiographer practice • Without radiologist oversight, radiographers may perform examinations without appropriate collimation, resulting in unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Where was the actual radiation field? Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  25. Sources of Errors in PACS • Mistakes in configuration of PACS • Improper calibration of PACS devices • Discrepancies between PACS and hospital processes • PACS design flaws • Inherent limitations of human operators • Inadequate training and documentation of PACS and hospital processes • Insufficient planning for PACS service interruptions Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  26. Main Department Orthopedic Clinic Mistakes in configuration of PACS • Inappropriate software settings and values • Outdated or inconsistent versions of software • Incompatible combinations of software and hardware Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  27. Before After Improper calibration of PACS devices • Includes monitors, Digital Radiography (DR), film digitizers, laser cameras, analogue interfaces, phototimers, etc. • Methodology for calibrations not well-established • Frequency of calibrations not well-established • Consequences of mis-calibration not widely acknowledged Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  28. Discrepancies between PACS and hospital processes => false assumptions • Patient identification data is invariant. • Only one radiologist is associated with a report. • Only one physician is associated with a request. • Images are used in surgery in the same manner as images are used in clinics. • The patient scheduled for an exam in Room 4 will be examined in Room 4. • The exam started in Room 4 will be completed in Room 4. • Outpatients are only examined in the Outpatient Center. • The same supervisors of exams on 1st shift are also present on 3rd shift. Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  29. PACS design flaws • Some software and hardware features either do not function, or act in an undesired manner (bugs) • Some processes that are absolutely required for clinical practice are not supported. • Limited connectivity • Incomplete implementation of DICOM • Incompatible interpretations of DICOM • Divergence from Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) • Lack of adherence to software design principles • Lack of application of Reliability Engineering Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  30. “To err is human, but to really foul things up requires a computer!” • Electronic images are imperfect: they are subject to deletion, mis-association, mis-routing, and mis-interpretation. • Electronic devices and media are im-permanent records: the consequence of loss is greater than one film or one film jacket. • A single bad electronic image can be proliferated: a single bad film image can be controlled. • Bad electronic images can disappear without a trace: bad films disappear, but leave a signature. How many films were in the box at start-of-shift? Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  31. The best maintenance is preventive maintenance. • Calibrations need to be performed on-schedule. • Operators need to clean, inspect, and document. Start-of-shift routines or checklists are helpful. • Schedule PM to occur at convenience of clinical operation. • Software upgrades are major service events that demand re-verification of proper function. Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  32. Insufficient planning for PACS service interruptions • How is PACS affected by loss of utility services, i.e., power, HVAC, or network? • How do I maintain continuity of clinical operations during downtime of an individual PACS component? • Can local components operate during downtime of a central PACS component (database, archive, gateway, RIS or RIS interface)? • How does PACS recover after service is restored? Software upgrade is a service interruption! “Weather never cooperates” Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  33. Conclusions • Unfortunately, errors will always occur in PACS. • Some of these errors cause unnecessary radiation dose to patients • QC is the key to detecting errors. • Training is key to averting errors. • Reliability engineering is key to continuity of clinical operations. • Disaster recovery is key to restoring normal clinical operations. • Optimisation includes all of the above. • Other lectures in this series concentrate on errors that occur in acquisition and display, rather than those that affect network quality of service and archive reliability. Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  34. Answer True or False • PACS is a system to store and retrieve patient information • Reason for retake of radiographic examination could be due to network problems • Improperly calibrated display can involve unnecessary radiation exposure to patient Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

  35. Answer True or False • False. Hospital information system (HIS) is used to store and retrieve patient information. This can be linked with the radiology information system (RIS) • True. Interruption in network service may result in losing the image, hence repeated radiographic examination would be required. • True. Improperly calibrated display can make digital images appear under-exposed. The radiologist may instruct radiographer to repeat examinations or increase radiologic technique causing unnecessary radiation exposure to patients Radiation Protection in Digital Radiology L09 Picture Archival and Communication System (PACS)

More Related