Volume CT dose index and dose-length product displayed during CT: what good are they?
- PMID: 20971777
- DOI: 10.1148/radiol.10100297
Volume CT dose index and dose-length product displayed during CT: what good are they?
Abstract
The average medical radiation effective dose to the U.S. population in 2006 was estimated at approximately 3.0 mSv, an increase of 600% in a single generation. Computed tomography (CT) alone accounts for approximately half of this medical radiation dose. Ongoing advances suggest that CT will continue to be the most important contributor, by far, to medical doses in the United States. The use of ionizing radiation in medical imaging, including CT, provides valuable diagnostic information that undoubtedly benefits many patients. Exposure to radiation, however, is currently believed to carry a small, but nonzero, risk. Accordingly, the medical imaging community must ensure that the benefits of a radiologic examination in any given patient exceed the corresponding risks. It is also the responsibility of the radiologist to ensure that no more radiation is used than needed for obtaining diagnostic information in any radiologic examination, especially CT.
© RSNA, 2010
Comment in
-
Searching for the holy grail: the pretense and fallacy of measuring CT radiation exposure in an individual patient.Radiology. 2011 Jul;260(1):306-7; author reply 307-8. doi: 10.1148/radiol.11110191. Radiology. 2011. PMID: 21697314 No abstract available.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
