RADIOBIOLOGY AND RAD PROTECTION CD #6 2006 WEEK 7 RT 244 1

RADIATION DETECTION

3 – RADIATION EXPOSURE

3 TYPES

OCCUPATIONAL (WORKERS)

MEDICAL – TESTS/EXAMS

PUBLIC – ALL OTHER TYPES (INCLUDING BACKGROUND)

5 EXPOSURE RATE (EXPOSURE MEASURED IN R OR C/KG)

EXPOSURE RATE = EXPOSURE TO PT / UNIT OF TIME

Surface Intregral Exposure = EXPOSURE X AREA OF RADIATION BEAM

6 – EXPOSURE IS NOT AMOUT PT RECEIVED – THIS IS ABSORED DOSE

MEASURED IN RAD OR GRAY = AMOUNT OF PHOTONS ENTERED SUBTRACT

AMOUNT EXIT = ABSORBED DOSE

1 GRAY = 100 RAD 1 cGY = 1 rad 1 mGy (milligra) = 100 mRad (millirad)

8 = QUALITY FACTOR

AMOUNT OF DAMAGE DEPENDS OF TYPE AND ENERGY OF PHOTON

ALPHA MORE DAMAGING THAN XRAY

(HIGH LET) (LOW LET)

DOSE EQUIVALENT - REMS – SIEVERTS

(OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE)

To CALCULATE DE (DOSE EQUIVALENT) A QUALITY FACTOR IS USED

XRAY / GAMMA/ BETA = 1 FAST NEUTRONS & ALPHA = 20

DOSE EQIVALANT VALUE = ABSORBED DOSE X QUALITY FACTOR

RAD X QF GRAY X QF

9 = SOME ORGANS MORE SENSITIVE TO RADIATION – SEE CHART Tissue Weighing Factors

GONAD .2 COLON/LUNG/STOMACH .12 BREAST/LIVER .05

12 – NCRP LIMITS

STOCHASTIC EFFECTS ARE NONTHRESHOLD / RANDOMMLY OCCURING BIOLOGICAL SOMATIC CHANGES IN WHICH THE CHANCE OF OCCURANCE (NOT THE SEVERITY OF THE EFFECT) IS PROPORTIONAL TO THE DOSE OF RADIATION

INCREASED DOSE LEADS TO AN INCREASED CHANCE OF CANCER

NON - STOCHASTIC EFFECTS (AKA – DETERMINISTIC) HAVE A THRESHOLD WHERE NO EFFECT IS SEEN - THEN THE SEVERITY INCREASES AS THE DOSE INCREASES –

USUALLY FROM HIGH DOSES

GI SYNDROME / BONE MARROW SYNDROME / CNS

COMMON EARLY EFFECTS =ERYTHEMIA LOW WBC EPILATION

LATE EFFECTS – CATARCTS, INFERTILITY

LOW DOSES CAN CAUSE BIOLOGIC DAMAGE AS WELL

OCCUPATIONAL DOSE LIMITS

EFFECTIVE DOSE EQUIV (DE) = 50 mSv (5 REM) PER YEAR

WHOLE BODY

LENS OF EYE 150 mSv (15 REM)

ALL OTHER 500 mSv (50 REM)

Long term accumulation 10mSv X age(year) (1 REM x AGE)‘

CUMULATIVE – LIFETME NOT TO EXCEED

13 – ALARA

14 SUMMARY OF RADIATION QUANTITIES & UNITS – CHART

16 – PERSONNEL MONITORING Badge on COLLAR – outside of apron

receive 1% of the annual total DE for any single month

1% = (.5 rem / .005 mSv)

MONTHLY LIMITS (50 mrem or .5mSv) OR any person portable radiography or fluoro

18 – OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURES - RADIATION WORKERS 1.5 mSv = ______rem

18 – occupational workers average 1.5mSv or .15 rem (150mrem)

(according to Merrills CH. 2 – 50 mrem/yr)

21 FILM BADGES= film inside

FILM BADGE – SENSITIVE 10 MREM – 500 REM

. 1 mSv to 5 sieverts

22 – read with a DENSITOMETER

AMOUNT OF DENSITY OF FILM PROPORTIONAL TO EXPOSURE

24 –( audio)

ADVANTAGES - INEXPENSIVE, MONTHLY RECORD PERMANENT

DISADAVANTAGE – TAKES A WHILE TO SEE REPORT FOR EXPOSURE

ONLY RECORDS IN BODY AREA WORN

ACCURACY + OR – 20 %

MUST BE CHANGED EACH MONTH

25/26 – TLD / POSL - LITHIUM FLORIDE CRYSTAL OR CHIP EXCITED – VISIBLE LIGHT EMMITTED – TEMP PLOTTED ON A CURVE PROP TO EXPOSURE

MORE ACCURATE MORE SENSITIVE MEASURE 5mR minimum TO 200Mr (measures ionization)

HIGH COST – BUT CHANGED IN 3 MONTHS = LATER = COST

ONCE READ NOT PERMANENT – BUT RECORD IS

28 – pocket dosimeter – not permanent (0 – 200 mR) immediate exposure readout

30 where to wear badge

33- film badge report - review and turn in *** look at film badge report = listed in mrem

TURN IN A CURRENT FILM BADGE REPORT

35 – Survey instruments

36  RADIATION MONITORS

37  Cutie pie Ionization chamber BY IONIZATION Q = T X תּ3.14 (pie) LOW – HIGH reading

1) Diagnostic Radiaiton when 2 sec or more is used 2) Pt ingestion of radioisotope

38  or Geiger Muller detector Used in Nuclear Med for radioactive particles

39  Scintillation Detectors – Gamma Camera (CT and Nuclear Med)