IAEA
IAEA
RADIATION PROTECTION IN
DIAGNOSTIC AND
INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
Introduction
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
Purpose of Shielding
• To protect:
• the patients (when not being examined)
• the X Ray department staff
• visitors and the public
• persons working adjacent to or near the X Ray
facility
Equipment
• What equipment is to be used?
• General radiography
• Fluoroscopy (with or without radiography)
• Dental (oral, cephalometric, or OPG)
• Mammography
• CT
Usage
• Different X Ray equipment have very
different usage.
• For example, a dental unit uses low mAs
and low (~70) kVp, and takes relatively few
X Rays each week
• A CT scanner uses high (~130) kVp, high
mAs, and takes very many scans each
week.
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 10
Shielding Design (IV)
Positioning
• The location and orientation of the X Ray
unit is very important:
• distances are measured from the equipment
(inverse square law will affect dose)
• the directions the direct (primary) X Ray beam
will be used depend on the position and
orientation
A to G are points
used to calculate
shielding
Surrounding areas
• The X Ray room must be designed with
knowledge of the location and use of all
rooms which adjoin the X Ray room
• Obviously a toilet will need less shielding
than an office
• Obtain a plan of the X Ray room and
surroundings (including level above and
below)
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 15
Radiation Shielding - Design Detail
Must consider:
• appropriate calculation points, covering all
critical locations
• design parameters such as workload,
occupancy, use factor, leakage, target dose
(see later)
• these must be either assumed or taken from
actual data
• use a reasonable, worst case scenario
(conservatively high estimates), since under-
shielding is worse than over-shielding
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 16
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
Radiation Shielding - Calculation
U - use factor
• fraction of time the primary beam is in a
particular direction i.e.: the chosen
calculation point
• must allow for realistic use
• for all points, sum may exceed 1
T - Occupancy
• T = fraction of time a particular place is occupied
by staff, patients or public
• Has to be conservative
• Ranges from 1 for adjacent offices and work areas,
to 1/20 for public toilets and 1/40 for outdoor areas
with transient traffic
Area Occupancy
W - Workload
• A measure of the radiation output in one
week
• Measured in mA-minutes
• Varies greatly with assumed maximum kVp
of X Ray unit
• Usually a gross overestimation
• Actual dose/mAs can be estimated
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 27
Workload (I)
SO HOW DO WE ESTIMATE W ?
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
Shielding - Construction I
Materials available:
• Lead sheet brick
• gypsum or high Z plasterboard
• concrete block
• leaded glass or acrylic